Sask. farmers brace for tough decisions amid canola trade dispute
Codie Nagy isn’t quite finished this year’s harvest, but the uncertainty in the markets fueled by Chinese tariffs on Canadian canola already has him contemplating next year’s crop rotation.
“If this lingers on and canola is essentially at a break-even point come mid-April or March, when we’ve got to finalize seeding plans, we might shift into something else if possible. So, it might alter our canola acres for next year, but this year, being that we’re at harvest, we’re essentially going to get what we have, and there’s nothing we can really do.”
Nagy, who farms near Ogema in southern Saskatchewan, was pleased to hear Premier Scott Moe say his trade mission to China was more positive than he expected.
“I think it will be helpful in the long run. I’d be more concerned if stuff like that wasn’t happening,” he said.




