How does the N.L. government plan to meet its food production goals? Potatoes - Action News
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How does the N.L. government plan to meet its food production goals? Potatoes

Three farmers are upping their potato game in a big way, with the province saying their potential millions of pounds in harvest will get Newfoundland and Labrador to its 2022 agricultural goal.

N.L. is still hoping to hit an ambitious agricultural target by next year

About 172 acres of the land earmarked by the N.L. government will be farmed by a partnership between two families: from left, Natalie and Adam Anderson, and Lukas and Janelle Doman. (Colleen Connors/CBC)

At a ceremony this week thatcelebrated small farmers taking big leaps, the Newfoundland and Labrador government has put the potato front and centre to its approachingdeadline to double food production in the provinceby 2022.

On Wednesday, thehumble starch became the centrepiece of that plan on a tract of newly cleared soil at Junction Brook, just east of Deer Lake.

There, three farming operationswere allotted 700 acres between them as the successfulbidders for Crown land leases specifically designated for large-scale potato production, some at Junction Brook and at other expanses near Cormack and Glenwood.

"We're pretty excited to have this opportunity. It'spretty impressive what the province has done here to take this agricultural land and make it available," said Lukas Doman, who along with partner Adam Anderson will be farming 172 acres,100 of which have been cleared.

In 2020, the provincial government announced it would spend $2.75 million to developthe land prior to asking for prospective farmers. Doman and Anderson, as first-time entrants into agriculture, say the clearing gives them a big boost.

"It's a huge step forward to be able step into a property and start planting in the very near future," Doman said.

The province is looking for a big boost as well, and is touting thetaters-to-be as its way to meet an agricultural goalitannounced in 2017:to double the amount of food produced in Newfoundland and Labrador from 10 to 20 per cent of the province's needs by 2022.

In the years since the initial announcement, there's been a flurry of agricultural investment and announcements to inch Newfoundland and Labrador's farming sector the smallest in Canada toward that goal.The potatoes will make that goal a reality, the province says, expecting 15 million poundsannually from the newly leased land.

"We'll see them in our grocery stores. they'll be on the shelves this fall," said Agriculture Minister Derrick Bragg.

This cleared land at Junction Brook, east of Deer Lake, is some of the 700 or so acres that has been leased to three farming operations for commercial potato production. (Colleen Connors/CBC)

Louis MacDonald and partner Scott Madorewill be farming potatoes at Junction Brook, and expanding their two-year-old farming business along the way.

"With this opportunity here, it looks like we're probablygoing to triple or quadruple [production]in the next couple years. It's a huge opportunity," MacDonald told CBC News.

Potatoes need patience

One veteran potato farmer welcomes Wednesday's potato boost, but questions whether the new land can get up to speed by the province'sdeadline next year.

"It's not just a matter of clearing land and 'here you go, it's good to grow.' Imean, it takes years to build up that soil to get its full potential,"said Melvin Rideout, a fourth-generation farmer in Cormack and the president of the province's HorticultureProducers Council.

While potatoes are a traditionally grown crop and do well in Newfoundland'sclimate, Rideout said newly cleared land needs two years of adding organic matter and tinkering with pHlevelsto make for ideal growing conditions.

WATCH | Colleen Connors speaks with farmers who have ambitious plans for potato production:

Buds with spuds: Why N.L. is banking on potatoes for food production

4 years ago
Duration 1:43
Colleen Connors speaks with some farmers who are ramping up potato production

For the first year, he said, spreading manure and planting other crops happier with poorer soil, like cabbage, is the way to go.

"You'regoing to have very reduced yields on freshly new cleared ground," he said.

Despite that hard work ahead, Rideout said the land clearing "is a big help" for farmers and will provide a boost for overall potato production, but with the vegetable a staple in so any households, there's more demand than supply.

"There's still a long ways to go, and a lot more potato production is needed toget up to what we're consuming in the province, but this is a good step forward," Rideout said.

Read morefrom CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Colleen Connors

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