Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada ships seeds to Ukraine amid food shortage

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jun, 2022 01:43 PM
  • Canada ships seeds to Ukraine amid food shortage

OTTAWA - Canada is sending seeds to Ukraine, including fast-growing buckwheat, to help out with a food crisis sparked by the Russian invasion, says Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau.

Ukraine, like Canada, is one of the world's biggest exporters of wheat and supplies many countries in Africa, Asia and the Middle East, as well as the UN World Food Program.

Ukraine's government has asked Canada to send seeds as well as testing equipment to certify grain being transported by rail through Europe. Russia has blockaded Ukraine's ports, including Odesa, and Ukraine's silos are bursting with grain from its last harvest, which it cannot export.

Buckwheat, used to make soba noodles, has a shorter growing season than wheat, making it easier to cultivate for Ukraine's hard-pressed farmers.

Bibeau said Canada is also shipping mobile silos to Ukraine to store grain.

“This is a kind of storage that can be installed very quickly,” Bibeau said in an interview on Friday.

Bibeau said Canadian farmers "want to step up" to help alleviate the world food shortage stemming from the invasion.

She said the government and Canada’s grain producers are “all hands on deck” to get as much grain to developing countries facing hunger as they can.

Canada’s grain growers are well aware of the global food shortages following the Russian invasion, she said, and are “really trying their best to produce more.”

“If we compare it to last year, which was a very bad year because of the drought, we hope to have about 44 per cent more production this year,” Bibeau said.

Katie Ward, president of the National Farmers Union, said Canadian farmers are fully aware of world shortages and there is already “a real push to grow every acre they can get under cultivation.”

At a press conference on Monday, Bibeau launched a consultation on how to address staff shortages in Canada's agricultural industry, including family farms.

She said Ukrainian farming families fleeing to Canada would be welcome in its agricultural sector, which has many similarities to Ukraine's.

The World Food Program has been warning for months that many countries that rely on Ukrainian wheat are facing starvation because of shortages.

Earlier this month, Mykola Solskyi, Ukraine's agrarian policy minister, told a House of Commons committee that Russia's military has been deliberately targeting Ukraine's grain stores. He also accused Russia of stealing Ukrainian grain and exporting it as Russian to Syria.

Putin’s forces have also placed mines in some Ukrainian fields and have bombed food storage facilities.

Last week, in the Ukrainian port Mykolaiv, a vegetable oil storage facility owned by Canadian-Dutch company Viterra was hit by a Russian missile strike, though no one was killed.

MORE National ARTICLES

Former B.C. clerk to be sentenced July 4

Former B.C. clerk to be sentenced July 4
The fraud charge against Craig James was stayed last week because it was related to the same set of evidence involving nearly $1,900 in claims he made for work attire, so a conviction was not entered on that count.

Former B.C. clerk to be sentenced July 4

Leaf blowers, gas tools axed in Oak Bay, B.C.

Leaf blowers, gas tools axed in Oak Bay, B.C.
Councillors have voted unanimously in favour of a ban on the noisy, fume-producing tools, including chainsaws and lawn mowers. Users, from homeowners to professional landscaping companies, will have three years to phase out gas-powered items.    

Leaf blowers, gas tools axed in Oak Bay, B.C.

Airport shutdown prompted by inert grenades: RCMP

Airport shutdown prompted by inert grenades: RCMP
RCMP Cpl. Andres Sanchez describes the items as looking and feeling like "the real thing," but lacking the internal parts required to explode. He says airport security staff called 911 and held the bag in the X-ray machine until police arrived and found that a second bag belonging to the same man was also inside the machine, but it had yet to be scanned.

Airport shutdown prompted by inert grenades: RCMP

One dead in ammonia leak in Kamloops, B.C.

One dead in ammonia leak in Kamloops, B.C.
The city says in a written statement that the RCMP and firefighters responded to the scene and several businesses were evacuated. It says police and WorkSafeBC are investigating how the ammonia was released, and the coroners service has also launched an investigation.

One dead in ammonia leak in Kamloops, B.C.

B.C. regulator backs homebuyer cooling-off period

B.C. regulator backs homebuyer cooling-off period
The report released Thursday advises that sellers be required to provide reasonable access for a property inspection during the three-day homebuyer protection period, which would start the day after an offer is accepted.

B.C. regulator backs homebuyer cooling-off period

Man arrested after sexually assaulting four women at a busy Vancouver SkyTrain Station

Man arrested after sexually assaulting four women at a busy Vancouver SkyTrain Station
On Friday, May 13, 2022, just before 4:30 p.m., a woman was sitting on a bench inside Pacific Centre Mall, near Granville Station, when a man allegedly approached her, touched her hip and attempted to pull her toward him. The suspect was interrupted by a Paladin Security Guard who shouted at him to stop and then called police.

Man arrested after sexually assaulting four women at a busy Vancouver SkyTrain Station