Need to Protect is Urgent: New bill aims to secure Ontario’s food-producing land

“Now more than ever, we need to protect the farmland that feeds us...”

Two Ontario lawmakers are pushing a bill to protect the province’s most productive farmland.

Supporters say that this could help safeguard the agri-food sector from outside trade pressures.

Ontario loses 319 acres of farmland every day, with only a small fraction of land suitable for food production. The need to protect is urgent.

Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner says that preserving farmland is crucial to Canada’s food security and sovereignty:

“Ontario is losing 319 acres of farmland every day. Only 5% of our land is suitable for growing food, and less than 1% is prime farmland. With these ridiculous trade threats, now more than ever, we need to protect the farmland that feeds us, our food security, our food sovereignty.”

The Chair of Food Systems at the University of Guelph supports farmland preservation but questions whether tariff threats directly endanger land use.

“I’m not sure that tariffs are going to be a significant threat to land use. This blanket statement that it will tariff-proof our ag sector is probably leveraging the issue of the moment. That’s not to diminish the value of land preservation, but unless we’re talking about specific tariffs and specific issues, this will make a significant difference,” Mike von Massow states.

The bill has received support from the Ontario Federation of Agriculture and the National Farmers Union, saying that farmers have wanted this for years.

Related Stories
Rising protein demand supports long-term trade in feed and meat.
Vive’s Art Graves shared insights on the new Phobos FC 360 foliar fungicide, its advantages for Canadian growers, early performance results, and the company’s ongoing commitment to advanced crop protection solutions.
F-10 Wound Spray can now be used for livestock and other animals as officials monitor the ongoing New World Screwworm outbreak in Mexico.
China’s stricter inspection rules prompt Cargill to pause soybean exports from Brazil, briefly lifting U.S. soybean prices as traders anticipate potential shifts in global trade, as export demand remains supportive across all major U.S. commodities.
Farm Bureau economist Dr. Faith Parum explains how geopolitical dynamics in the Middle East could further tighten fertilizer movement, increase fuel costs, and complicate planting decisions for U.S. farmers this spring.
Dr. David Anderson with Texas A&M University AgriLife Extension discusses how geopolitical tensions and the Middle East, along with export disruptions in the Chinese market, will shape cattle markets in the months ahead.