Canada - Making forage insurance more accessible

09.04.2024 481 views

An industry-government forage insurance task team is working on ways to make forage insurance more widely available across the country. Currently, producers can insure forages under AgriInsurance, but other forage insurance isn’t equal across Canada and very few forage producers use it. 

Ryder Lee, general manager of the Canadian Cattle Association and chair of the task team, presented an update at the Canadian Forage and Grassland Association’s 14th annual conference in Harrison Hot Springs, B.C., in November. 

The team has representatives from provincial crop insurance agencies, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and the beef, dairy and forage sectors. It’s focused on improving programs and increasing uptake. 

Lee said one of the main reasons for discussions is that when events unfold that could have been covered by insurance, and people aren’t in the program, it is unable to respond. Increasing uptake would help get to a spot where governments aren’t getting clobbered and where industry associations aren’t being pressured to find alternative ways to address events. 

He said another reason is to level the playing field on land use between perennial or annual crops. The goal is to make sure the programs and their risk profile don’t influence decisions on what land should be used for. 

Satellite crop assessment 

One of the task team’s projects is product design. This includes premium cost, when the program should pay out and the basis of coverage, such as expected production or rainfall. 

Another topic is communicating details to staff and to potential users. A unique challenge is that forage insurance is not just for grass. 

“It’s a different customer base with different needs and different cash-flow situations,” Lee said. “It’s different if you’re growing hay and you’re selling it: you’re insuring an output… versus if you’re growing feed and you’re growing an input. You have some strongly different motivations if you’re growing feed versus if you’re growing saleable goods.” 

The task team members also discuss and share provincial successes and challenges, allowing them to duplicate successes and avoid problems. 

Another focus is exploring technology such as satellite imagery and machine learning. The team is also looking at forage insurance programs, technology uses and marketing initiatives in other countries. 

As for what comes next, Lee said that is being determined province by province. Global Ag Risk Solutions has a project looking at technology add-ons, satellite imagery and ways to use that satellite imagery. The task team is working together to engage producers and look at ways to reach non-users. And research continues on business risk management programs to see if they can be improved or if they should be replaced. 

Forage insurance in Quebec 

In Quebec, the main forage insurance plan offered is Hay Crop Insurance (ASREC-foin). It is administered by Financière Agricole du Québec (FADQ), a Crown corporation that manages agri- cultural insurance and financing pro- grams in the province. 

Sixty per cent of the insurance is financed by the federal and provincial governments. It is a voluntary program, allowing producers to opt in or out. The other 40 per cent comes from producer premiums. 

William Robitaille, a consultant and PhD bioresource engineering student in the faculty of agricultural and environ- mental sciences at McGill University, focused his master’s thesis on Quebec’s hay crop insurance program, conduct- ing an analysis of its implementation compared to a similar program in Pennsylvania. He said approximately 5,000 farm businesses were insured under the ASREC-foin program in 2023. 

“According to our estimates, in recent years, between 40 per cent and 60 per cent of hay acreage in Quebec has been insured,” said Robitaille. “Producers are therefore making good use of this pro- gram, unlike other forage insurance pro- grams such as those in Pennsylvania.”

The Hay Crop Insurance program provides group coverage, with damage assessed globally for a group of farms in the same region. Compensation corresponds to the average losses assessed for a producer’s area or weather station. 

FADQ assesses hay crop losses using weather stations and loss grids. Producers have until April 30 each year to insure their hay crops and can choose which weather stations within a 75-kilometre radius of their farm will be used to assess crop losses. 

“This approach aims to uncouple insurance from producer decisions,” Robitaille explained. 

In addition to the choice of weather station, growers have several other options, including the guarantee between 70 and 85 per cent of the insurable value; the unit price of hay between 60 and 100 per cent of the reference unit price in 2023; the number of mowings, between two and four; and the harvest start date, which is declared according to the number of mowings chosen. 

There is a hedging option which offers two choices. The first is the feed requirements option, which calculates the quantity of hay insured according to the feed requirements of the company’s herd. The second is the acreage option, which is based on the insured acreage and reference yield of each weather station. 

“Animal producers can choose both options, while non-animal producers can only insure with the second option,” said Robitaille, adding that organic hay producers also have specific options detailed on the FADQ website. 

“It is important to note the risk of non-correlation between losses observed in the field and those assessed by the stations, due to factors such as the distance between the station and the farm,” he said. “Producers should therefore evaluate the results of their adherence to this program in the medium and long term, taking into account potential differences between losses observed and those evaluated by FADQ.”

Source - https://www.canadiancattlemen.ca

14.01.2026

UKEF backs €193mn loan for key agricultural project in Uganda

UK Export Finance (UKEF) has backed a €192.9mn loan to finance the first phase of a key agricultural project in Uganda set to boost the country’s economy.

14.01.2026

India - Haryana releases ₹116 crore to 53,821 farmers for crop loss due to heavy rains

Providing financial relief to farmers, Haryana chief minister Nayab Singh Saini on Wednesday released a crop compensation of ₹116.15 crore to 53,821 farmers for losses suffered due to heavy rains in August-September.

14.01.2026

India - Uttarakhand faces snow drought and forest fires as lack of rain hits crops

Rabi crops have suffered estimated losses of 15–25 per cent, officials say, as an unusually dry winter raises concerns over glaciers and water security.

14.01.2026

Vietnam, US launch 15.2 million USD tilapia development project

The project has a total budget of more than 15.2 million USD and will be implemented over five years, aiming to raise tilapia output to 1.21 million tonnes, with total sales value estimated at around 1.25 billion USD.

14.01.2026

Puerto Rico - New agriculture secretary aims to use science to boost local farming

Agronomist Irving Rodríguez Torres, the newly appointed secretary of the Department of Agriculture, has unveiled an ambitious administrative agenda aimed at modernizing Puerto Rico’s agricultural sector.

14.01.2026

EPPO seizes assets from Italian livestock farmers

Italian authorities, acting at the request of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO), have frozen assets belonging to four livestock farmers suspected of fraudulently claiming EU agricultural subsidies for grazing activities. 

13.01.2026

Brazil - Farm sector pushes to restore funding safeguard for crop insurance

After a year of declines in Brazil’s rural insurance market and coverage—triggered by a nearly 50% cut in federal subsidies—insurers are lobbying Congress to overturn President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s veto of a provision in the Budget Guidelines Law (LDO) that would have protected funding for the policy in 2026.

13.01.2026

India - Central team reviews flood damage in Kamalapur of Kalaburagi district

A two-member Central team on Tuesday visited flood-affected villages in Kamalapur taluk of Kalaburagi district to assess crop and infrastructure damage caused by heavy rain in August and September last year and heard grievances of farmers.