Canada - Flooding Seen Increasing Claims for Crop Insurance

03.07.2014 194 views

Saskatchewan, Canada’s biggest producer of wheat and canola, expects insurance payouts on crops to increase after floods wiped out acreage.

“It’s a very large area that’s impacted, so we expect to get a number of claims,” said Shawn Jaques, the chief executive officer of Saskatchewan Crop Insurance Corp., a government-owned company based in Melville, Saskatchewan. “There will be a large number of producers that had their crops seeded, and it’ll be flooded out.”

It’s too early to estimate the extent of the damage as producers are just starting to call in with flooding reports, Jaques said. Parts of Saskatchewan and Manitoba are experiencing severe flooding after as much as 200 millimeters (8 inches) of rain fell last weekend. Fifty-four municipalities in Saskatchewan have declared a state of emergency, Colin King, the province’s deputy commissioner of emergency management and fire safety.

Wheat sowing in Saskatchewan may decline as much as 15 percent after excessively wet weather, Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin-based Martell Crop Projections said in report today. Four million acres in the Canadian prairies may be too wet to plant, according to LeftField Commodity Research.

Manitoba Fields

The extent of damage in Manitoba is still being assessed and will depend on whether crops were completely washed out or fields can recover as water recedes, said David Koroscil, the manager of insurance projects for Manitoba Agricultural Services Corp., a government-owned company that provides risk-management and financial services to farmers. Growers in the province may file the largest number of claims for acres too wet to plant since 2011, he said.

Symptoms of excess moisture stress, including yellowing and slowed crop development, are evident in Manitoba fields, and plants have been wiped out in some areas, the province said in a report on June 30. Further damage will probably occur because of flooding and saturated soils, according to the report.

About half of the 600 acres Glen Franklin rents out to wheat and canola producers in southwestern Manitoba will not produce any crop this year because the seeded area is underwater and the rest was too wet to sow, he said.

Source - http://www.bloomberg.com/

04.06.2026

India - Delhi raises crop damage compensation after 10 years by over 50% to Rs 75,000 per hectare

In a major relief for farmers, the Delhi government has increased compensation for crop loss caused by rain and hailstorms from Rs 20,000 per acre to Rs 75,000 per hectare.

04.06.2026

Why Tech-Driven Agro-Insurance Has Stumbled in Ethiopia

For decades, Ethiopia’s agricultural sector has remained trapped in a dangerous paradox. 

04.06.2026

UK - Rural crime cost Wales £2.2m last year despite fall in offences

Rural crime cost Wales an estimated £2.2 million last year, with organised criminals continuing to target tractors, livestock and farming equipment despite an overall fall in offences, according to a new report.

04.06.2026

Kenyan Agro-Insurance Startup, Pula Raises US$ 20 Million in Series B Round

Pula, a Kenyan startup that offers insurance to small-scale farmers, aims to serve more than 100 million farmers in Africa after raising US$ 20 million in its Series B round. 

04.06.2026

USA - USDA announces $52M to boost public access to private lands for hunting, fishing

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is announcing $52 million to help state and tribal governments encourage private landowners to allow public access to their land for hunting, fishing and other wildlife-dependent recreation through the Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program (VPA-HIP). 

04.06.2026

Hope Grows in Malawi’s Grain Stores as Farmers Battle Post-Harvest Losses

Some grain rots in poorly ventilated storage. Some is eaten by pests. Some is damaged during drying or transportation before it ever reaches the market.

03.06.2026

Canada - AFSC extends several northern Alberta seeding dates for 2026

Alberta’s Agriculture Financial Services Corp. (AFSC) is extending the recommended seeding dates in the province’s northeast, northwest and Peace regions for several crops for the 2026 growing season only.

03.06.2026

India - Elephants run amok in Konaje agricultural farm, cause massive crop damage

A herd of elephants, including calves, wreaked havoc on an agricultural farm belonging to Yashodhara Gowda at Pallattadka in Konaje village of Kadaba taluk.