SaskBarley
  • About Us
    • Annual Reports
    • Barley Levy
    • Board & Staff
    • Core Functions
    • Scholarships
    • Sponsorship
  • Research
    • BarleyBin Field Lab
      • 2026 Application
      • Frequently Asked Questions
      • 2024 Results and Protocols
      • 2023 Results and Protocol
    • Projects
    • Research Priorities
    • SR&ED Tax Credit
  • Market Development
    • Barley Buyers
    • Canadian Malting Barley Technical Centre
    • Market Reports
  • Strategic Partnerships
    • AITC SK
    • Canadian Barley Research Coalition
    • Canadian Malting Barley Technical Centre
    • Cereals Canada
    • Farm & Food Care Saskatchewan
    • Grain Growers of Canada
    • SaskCrops
  • News & Events
    • Announcements
    • e-Newsletter
    • Events
  • Resources
    • Barley Production
    • BarleyBin Magazine
    • BarleyBin Podcast
  • Contact
April 22, 2021

Saskatchewan farm organizations advocate for carbon offset system that recognizes and rewards farmers’ contribution

News

Saskatchewan farm organizations, the Soil Conservation Council of Canada and the Saskatchewan Soil Conservation Association (SSCA) are encouraging farmers to participate in a review of the Government of Canada’s proposed Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Offset Credit System regulations. The proposed regulations are open for a 60‐day comment period from now until May 5, 2021.

A coalition of Saskatchewan farm group representatives are united in ensuring that Saskatchewan farmers are recognized and compensated for carbon sequestered from conservation practices, including zero‐till and continuous cropping. The groups represented include Sask Wheat, SaskCanola, SaskPulse, SaskBarley, SaskFlax, SaskOats, Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities, Agriculture Producers Association of Saskatchewan, the Soil Conservation Council of Canada and the SSCA.

“The carbon sequestered each year by Saskatchewan farmers is a critical asset to help both the federal and provincial governments meet their climate change goals. That value should be recognized and returned to the farmgate,” said Jocelyn Velestuk, a Sask Wheat and SSCA director, and member of the SSCA’s Carbon Advisory Committee. At this critical juncture, the SSCA’s Carbon Advisory Committee is committed to working with the federal and provincial governments to develop a science‐based offset protocol for the sequestration of carbon in agricultural soils. As Support Group Members of the Carbon Advisory Committee, Saskatchewan farm organizations support the Committee’s efforts.

“Each year, through no‐till practices, Saskatchewan farmers sequester about 9‐million new tonnes of carbon dioxide. We are committed to achieving a regulatory environment that recognizes this significant positive impact,” added Velestuk, citing the Government of Saskatchewan’s Prairie Resilience Paper.

While details on what farming and ranching practices will be eligible to earn offset credits through the federal protocols are still being developed, the draft regulations indicate that land‐management practices will have to go above and beyond “business as usual.”

“Even though the federal government has recognized the annual contribution of new and incremental sequestration in agricultural soils, the federal proposal could disqualify the majority of Saskatchewan crop producers from participating in an offset trading system,” explained John Bennett, Chair of the SSCA Carbon Advisory Committee.

The SSCA Carbon Advisory Committee and Support Group Members will continue to advocate for separate regulations for agricultural carbon sink protocols that would not be subject to non‐scientific factors such as “business as usual.”

Any offset program must also include farmer ownership of soil carbon credits, a registry that allows farmers to “bank” their credits, an effective price discovery mechanism, and full transparency of basis costs.

To get involved in the federal consultations visit: https://www.canada.ca/en/environment‐climatechange/services/climate‐change/pricing‐pollution‐how‐it‐will‐work/output‐based‐pricingsystem/federal‐greenhouse‐gas‐offset‐system.html

For more information on the positioning of the SSCA Carbon Advisory Committee and Support Group Members see: https://www.ssca.ca/carbon‐initiative

For more information, contact:
Tanya Craddock, Executive Director
Saskatchewan Soil Conservation Association
306-371-4213 | info@ssca.ca
www.ssca.ca

Fusarium map for Saskatchewan barley a reminder to get seed tested this year SaskBarley’s 2020 call for barley research results in $1 million in funding

Related Posts

AAFC Funding cuts

News

SaskCrops Looking for Solutions to Recent AAFC Research Staff Reductions & Station Closures

ADF Funding 2026

News

SaskBarley commits $145,724 to collaborative barley research

Cover post - promoting winners

News

SaskBarley Announces 2025 Graduate Scholarship Recipients, Expands Program with Labatt Partnership

Recent News

  • SaskCrops Looking for Solutions to Recent AAFC Research Staff Reductions & Station Closures
    February 2, 2026
  • SaskBarley commits $145,724 to collaborative barley research
    January 13, 2026
  • SaskBarley Announces 2025 Graduate Scholarship Recipients, Expands Program with Labatt Partnership
    January 6, 2026

What's Happening?

Feb 10
February 10 @ 8:00 am - February 12 @ 2:00 pm CST

Western Canada Feedlot Management School (Saskatoon)

Feb 26
8:00 am - 5:00 pm CST

Top Crop Summit – Saskatoon

Mar 12
8:30 am - 3:00 pm CST

Crop Opportunities 2026

Mar 25
March 25 @ 8:00 am - March 27 @ 5:00 pm CST

Learn to Lead 2026

View Calendar
SaskBarley
  • X
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Spotify
© 2025 The Saskatchewan Barley Development Commission. All Rights Reserved.

Subscribe to the BarleyBin monthly e-Newsletter

Subscribe Now

Subscribe to our RSS Feed

barleybin.ca logo

Discover seeding, pest management, harvest and production resources to boost your barley crop at BarleyBin.ca.