British Columbia

B.C. dairy industry faces possible exodus of farmers as costs pile up due to floods, heat waves

Farmers say they were already facing a tough future as many had little feed for their animals due to B.C.'s record-breaking heat waves in the summer.

'Serious feed shortage' is looming, Abbotsford farmer warns

A dairy cow alongside a high water mark from recent flooding at the U&D Meier Dairy farm in the Sumas Prairie area of Abbotsford, B.C., on Nov. 29. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

As farmers clean up following storms and consequent flooding in southern British Columbia, an industry official and operator say some will be forced to leave the industry as costs pile up.

Heavy rain from a series of "atmospheric rivers'' in mid-November forced thousands from their homes and left at least four people dead.

Gary Baars, who owns a dairy farm in the Sumas area of Abbotsford, B.C., said he decided to get his cows off his property early after a cousin called about his own flooding experience.

At the time, his property was dry and Baars said people driving by laughed at his pre-emptive measure.

That laughter soon turned into requests for help, with Baars saying he was fielding up to 100 calls an hour from farmers trying to save their livestock as water levels rose.

All but one of his cows survived the eventual flooding.

An aerial image of a flooded out farm with ominous clouds in the horizon.
A flooded Sumas Prairie on Dec. 3. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

Baars said other farmers were already facing a tough future as many had little feed for their animals due to B.C.'s record-breaking heat waves in the summer.

That, combined with the flooding and inflation, has reduced profit margins, Baars said.

"Hay prices are high everywhere,'' he said. "I kept thinking it was a bit of a bubble but between inflation, increased fertilizer and fuel prices and a lack of supply, there's going to be a serious feed shortage.''

Baars said many in the dairy industry have a lot of debt and this past year has been tough on farmers.

"I could definitely see some people saying, 'You know what, I'm equity rich and cash poor and this is a good time to get out of this racket,''' he said.

Agriculture Minister Lana Popham has said 628,000 chickens, 420 dairy cattle and roughly 12,000 hogs died in the Sumas Prairie after historic flooding left some properties 2½ metres under water.

More than 6,000 dairy cows were transported from affected farms to others safe from flooding.

Cows that were stranded in a flooded barn are rescued after rainstorms triggered landslides and floods and shut highways in Abbotsford, B.C., on Nov. 16. (Jennifer Gauthier/Reuters)

Sarah Sache, vice-chair of the B.C. Dairy Association, said Baars' concern is one her group is monitoring.

"It's going to be a turning point for some farms if they continue in the industry,'' she said.

It will likely depend on what stage of their career farmers are in to determine whether they continue, Sache said.

Finding appropriate feed for livestock will also have a large impact on farmers' livelihoods, she said.

She noted that farmers on the Sumas Prairie had low stores of feed and many of their supplies were damaged in the flooding.

"Sourcing feed of the quality those farmers would've provided and finding sources of that will be hard,'' she said. "The feed issue is going to be a big challenge across the industry.''

Later Friday, Popham and her federal counterpart are expected to tour a poultry farm that was flooded and to address recovery and rebuilding efforts.