Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. task force aims to grow agriculture, food processing industries

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Feb, 2025 03:19 PM
  • B.C. task force aims to grow agriculture, food processing industries

British Columbia is launching a task force focused on growing the agriculture and food processing industries after years of struggle due to climate, labour concerns and now the threat of tariffs from the United States.

Agriculture Minister Lana Popham says the task force will provide recommendations to government in the next 10 months on topics such as access to water, land and labour, as well as competitiveness and investment.

Popham says plans for the task force were underway before threats from U.S. President Donald Trump to put 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian goods, but the added economic uncertainty means now is the time to be focused on buying B.C. goods.

Danielle Synotte, executive director of the BC Agriculture Council and co-chair of the new task force, says many farmers and ranchers are concerned about the "double whammy" of having to deal with both possible tariffs and counter-tariffs.

She says farmers are adaptable and are already looking to diversify or are considering other markets as a way to respond to the U.S. threats.

Task force co-chair James Donaldson, CEO of BC Food & Beverage, says even if the tariff threat goes away in the short term it is having a permanent effect on U.S. buying behaviour as Americans look to buy U.S. products to avoid uncertainty in their own supply.

"That's going to cause us to change the way we do things, and we're going to have to be able to find ways to keep more Canadian products in Canada," he said. "So, it'll be really key for industry to work with government as well as Canada's retailers." 

Popham said B.C. shoppers are already "voting with their pocketbooks" and Canadian fruit is being sold more quickly in some B.C. stores than American varieties.

"But we have a lot of work to do also, as government and industry, to make it easier for people to grow food here, to process food, and then also to establish new markets that are stable," she said.

"We thought we had a stable partner with (the) United States. That's proven to be wrong. And so we need to find different measures to move our goods, but that also includes provinces and territories right here in our own country."

MORE National ARTICLES

NDP expected to unveil campaign pledge to remove GST on internet, heat, diapers, more

NDP expected to unveil campaign pledge to remove GST on internet, heat, diapers, more
With the cost of living playing a central role in provincial elections across Canada and in the U.S. presidential race, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is set to unveil a pre-campaign policy plank for the next federal election to differentiate his party from the governing Liberals.  Singh is expected to announce this morning that an NDP government would remove the GST on what his party deems "essentials." 

NDP expected to unveil campaign pledge to remove GST on internet, heat, diapers, more

Abbotsford man pleads guilty to trafficking in black bear paws

Abbotsford man pleads guilty to trafficking in black bear paws
British Columbia's Conservation Officer Service says a man from Abbotsford has pleaded guilty to two counts of trafficking in black bear paws. A statement from the service says Hong Tao Yang entered his pleas in a Port Coquitlam courtroom on Wednesday, where he was ordered to pay a penalty and victim surcharge worth a total of $8,625.

Abbotsford man pleads guilty to trafficking in black bear paws

RCMP warn against vigilantism in Squamish as concerns circulate online

RCMP warn against vigilantism in Squamish as concerns circulate online
Police in Squamish have issued a warning against vigilante action over safety concerns they say are circulating on social media. The statement from Sea to Sky RCMP says police want to "reassure" residents of the community about 60 kilometres north of Vancouver that "there is no current threat to public safety."

RCMP warn against vigilantism in Squamish as concerns circulate online

Housing targets on track for Vancouver

Housing targets on track for Vancouver
The City of Vancouver says it is on track to meet provincial targets in housing development in its latest progress report. Vancouver's first annual report on the targets showed that more than four-thousand units were built in the city from October 2023 to September 2024.

Housing targets on track for Vancouver

Dozens of criminal charges laid against 3 people in an alleged fraudulent bank-draft scheme

Dozens of criminal charges laid against 3 people in an alleged fraudulent bank-draft scheme
Dozens of criminal charges have been laid against three people in an alleged fraudulent bank-draft scheme that targeted vehicle businesses for what police say was about 850-thousand dollars in losses. R-C-M-P in Richmond say their officers began an investigation in January over allegations that forged bank drafts were used to purchase high-end vehicles, including B-M-W's, Mercedes-Benz and others valued at between 33-thousand and 103-thousand dollars.

Dozens of criminal charges laid against 3 people in an alleged fraudulent bank-draft scheme

4 arrested in drug trafficking investigation

4 arrested in drug trafficking investigation
Mounties in Burnaby say four people have been arrested and large amounts of drugs and cash have been seized following a four-month interprovincial drug trafficking investigation. They say officers executed two search warrants on properties in Coquitlam and Surrey and seized more than 95-hundred Hydromorphone pills believed to be diverted prescription pills, as well as other substances including more than a kilogram of suspected cocaine.

4 arrested in drug trafficking investigation