Big uptake from P.E.I. farmers for climate funding - Action News
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PEI

Big uptake from P.E.I. farmers for climate funding

P.E.I. farmers were keen to apply for a federal funding program that focused on ways to help their farms use various types of green equipment and technology.

'It's a very overwhelming response, it's a great thing'

Tractor working soil in Elmwood.
Alan Miller has been using new methods and equipment on his farm to reduce green house gas emissions. (Aaron Adetuyi/CBC)

A federal program saw huge interest from P.E.I. farmers who snapped upabout $2.5 million dollars in climate funding injust a fewweeks.

Rimsha Khan is a climate action specialist with the P.E.I. Federation of Agriculture, the group that'sdistributing the funds.

"It's a very overwhelming response, it's a great thing," said Khan.

Khan said they saw a wide range of people applying for the funding from small farms to larger operations.

Rimsha Khan in field of winter wheat.
Climate Action Specialist Rimsha Khan says the P.E.I. Federation of Agriculture saw tremendous interest from farmers to take on climate action projects. (Laura Meader/CBC)

This is the second year for The Agricultural Climate Solutions On Farm Climate Action Fund, which was created to helpfarms develop practices to reduce greenhouse gases released from agriculturalactivity.

'Game changer'

Farmer Alan Miller says the climate fund was a game changerfor his grains and oilseedfarming operation in Elmwood.

Miller said he wouldn't have been able to afford to buythe new equipment on his own.

He used the money to help buy a fertilizer applicator which uses GPS to track where the fertilizer goes.

Alan Miller stands beside his tractor with the tablet he uses to program his fertilizer applicator.
Alan Miller shows the tablet which is connected to the GPS fertilizer applicator he now uses. (Laura Meader/CBC)

"If you've already been over an area it automatically knows and it shuts off that part of the spreader, so it really takes care of human error and puts exactly the amount of fertilizer that I want on," he said.

Miller said in the past,he would miss parts of his winter wheat field or make double applicationsin some places.

"If you have the right amount of nitrogen, the plants take it up and you don't get the emissions,"

Using less fertilizer

It's also saved him money, which is helpfulwhen fertilizer has almost doubled in price.

He estimates he uses about 10 per cent less fertilizer now.

Beef farmer Nick Green got funding to help with rotational grazing fencing and new water lines, to supply water to other fields.

person and cattle
Beef farmer Nick Green says the money he's received through the fund has helped him save money, something that's important as costs rise. (Submitted by Nick Green )

Green said with rotational grazing, cattle are rotated in smaller paddocks in a controlled way, compared to just letting the animals out in a large field. It means some parts of the field can be left alone for 20 days.

"You can control how much they're going to consume froman area so it doesn't get overgrazed," said Green.

He said there's lots of benefits to it from soil improvement andmoisture conservationto reducing the need to haul feed to other areas.

Farmers saving money

Green also said improving the soil's health has also meant saving somemoney when it comes to feeding his cattle.

He said he suspects the big uptake is related to increasing costs farmers are facing.

"People typically won't do anything unless there's a cost benefit" he said.

Khan says adopting new scientific ways of farming can be expensive if farmers have to pay for new equipment themselves.

She said the federation is hoping they will be able to get more funds, to help more farmers who were interested in the program.

"Our farmers are really ready to adopt these practices and if we can help them in that, that would be great," said Khan.

With files from Laura Meader