$4.5M in federal funding for new 'living lab' on-farm research projects - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:25 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

$4.5M in federal funding for new 'living lab' on-farm research projects

The federal government has announced $4.5 million in funding for a new P.E.I. "living lab" the four-year-old program that bringstogether farmers, scientists and others to do on-farm research.

Funding will be used to study practices likefeeding cattle seaweed, rotational grazing

A farmer holds some tillage radishes pulled from a field on P.E.I.
Ben Visser holds some of the tillage radishes growing as a cover crop in a field in Vernon Bridge, P.E.I., in April. Cover crops protect against erosion over the winter and make the soil healthier. It's one of the practices that have been studied under the 'living lab' concept. (Nancy Russell/CBC)

The federal government has announced $4.5 million in funding for a new P.E.I. "living lab" the four-year-old program that bringstogether farmers, scientists and others to do on-farm research.

The initiative has brought research projects to more than 125 farms across the Island. Itfocusedinitially on farming best practices, but the program is now pivoting to climate change research.

Lawrence MacAulay, who is bothfederal agriculture minister and an Island MP, said the lab will drive innovation while helping Canada's net-zero emission goals.

The labs can help farmers boost crop yields, too, he said.

"All farmers and ranchers are business people, they're big business people, and if they can see there's a way to save money or make more money, that's what they will do."

The East Prince Agri-Environment Association, a not-for-profit organization representing multiple Island farms, will lead the new projects. The association was the first in Canada to pilot a Living Labs program.

Seaweed for cattle

The $4.5 million over five years will be used for research meant to help store carbon and reduce greenhouse gas emissions on Island farms, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada said in a news release.

Researchers will study practices likeadding kelp to cattle diets, rotational grazingand installing edge-of-field wetlands.

To this point, the Living Labs researchhadincluded projects around water management, fertilizer use, and soil and nutrient conservation. They've helped reduce the need for irrigation and come up with best practices for cover crops.

Scott Anderson of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada said in April that the project had been rewarding.

"Mostly because it really gave us that chance to work closely with producers, and to have them involved right from the beginning, to increase the speed of adoption of these practices."

A man wearing a hoodie and green vest stands in a farm yard on P.E.I.
Scott Anderson managed the Living Labs initiative on P.E.I. for Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. (Shane Hennessey/CBC )

He said Living Labshadbrought together farmers and researchers in a new way.

"The scientists were a little scared to go deal with the producers more closely, and the producers had sort of an apprehension as well," Anderson said.

"But at the end of the day, just knocking down that barrier and having that relationship built I think has done wonders."

With files from Nancy Russell and Wayne Thibodeau