Summary#
This bill requires the federal Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food to create a national strategy to conserve and improve soil health. It sets timelines for tabling the strategy and reporting on its results. It also recognizes World Soil Day and National Soil Conservation Week.
- The Minister must develop and table a national soil strategy within 2 years of the Act coming into force (Reports to Parliament—Tabling (1)).
- The strategy must include measures to analyze soil status, collect ongoing soil data, and share knowledge, including a national soil information system (National Strategy—Content (3)(a), (b), (f)).
- The strategy must support research, education, technical assistance, and Indigenous stewardship practices (Content (3)(d)).
- It may recommend adding regenerative soil practices into policy and laws (Content (3)(e)).
- It must include recommendations on appointing a national advocate for soil health (National Strategy—National advocate (4)).
- The Minister must report on the strategy’s effectiveness every 3 years (Reports to Parliament—Report). December 5 is “World Soil Day,” and the third week of April is “National Soil Conservation Week” (Designation).
What it means for you#
- Households: No direct rules or fees. You may see more public information about soil and farming practices over time (Content (3)(g); Designation).
- Farmers and ranchers: Expect more offers of research, training, and technical help on soil health, if the strategy leads to programs (Content (3)(d)). Government may seek permission to sample or monitor soils on private land; participation is voluntary for private land (Content (3)(b)).
- Agribusiness and input suppliers: You may see guidance on fertilizer, weed, pest, and tillage strategies based on new data and research (Content (3)(b), (d)). Future policy or legislation may incorporate “regenerative” practices, which could affect product demand or management practices (Content (3)(e)).
- Indigenous governments and organizations: The Minister must consult you in developing the strategy. The strategy must promote Indigenous stewardship and knowledge-sharing on soils (Consultation (2); Content (3)(d)(iv)).
- Provincial and territorial governments, municipalities: The Minister must consult provincial agriculture authorities on the strategy (Consultation (2)). You may be engaged in data-sharing or program coordination if the strategy proposes joint efforts (Content (3)(f)).
- Researchers and educators: The strategy is expected to support research programs, education, knowledge transfer, and a national soil information system, which could expand funding or collaboration opportunities (Content (3)(d)(i)–(iii), (f)).
- All Canadians: National observances (World Soil Day and National Soil Conservation Week) aim to raise awareness but do not change daily obligations (Designation). Strategy and results will be public via reports and the department’s website (Publication (2); Reports to Parliament—Report).
Expenses#
Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.
- No explicit appropriations, fees, or taxes are in the bill text. It mandates strategy development, consultations, reporting, and recognitions only (National Strategy—Development (1); Reports to Parliament; Designation).
- Possible costs to develop the strategy, consult stakeholders, and produce reports are not quantified in the bill (Data unavailable).
- Any costs to create a national soil information system or a national advocate would depend on future decisions; the bill only requires the strategy to include these elements or recommendations, not to implement them (Content (3)(f); National advocate (4)).
Proponents' View#
- A national strategy will coordinate soil health efforts across Canada and set a common evidence base, improving planning for producers facing droughts and floods (Preamble; National Strategy—Development (1); Content (3)(a)).
- Ongoing data on soil carbon, compaction, fertility, and management impacts will help farmers choose practices that improve yields and profitability over time (Content (3)(b)).
- Supporting research, education, and technical assistance will speed adoption of proven practices and reduce erosion and degradation (Content (3)(d)(i)–(iii)).
- Promoting Indigenous stewardship and knowledge can improve land management and respect local conditions and traditions (Content (3)(d)(iv)).
- A national soil information system will improve data access for farmers, researchers, and governments, reducing duplication and enabling better programs (Content (3)(f)).
- Regular public reporting creates accountability with clear timelines: strategy within 2 years, effectiveness reports every 3 years (Reports to Parliament—Tabling (1); Report).
Opponents' View#
- The bill creates duties but no funding; without dedicated resources, the strategy may be thin or slow to implement (National Strategy—Development (1); Reports to Parliament—Report).
- Agriculture is shared across federal, provincial, and Indigenous jurisdictions; coordination challenges could delay data collection and program alignment (Consultation (2)).
- Data collection on private land requires owner permission, which may lead to gaps and limit the value of a national soil information system (Content (3)(b), (f)).
- Recommending incorporation of “regenerative” practices into policy or legislation could later increase compliance costs for producers and agribusiness, depending on how governments act (Content (3)(e)).
- Creating or staffing a national soil information system or an advocate role could add administrative costs; the bill provides no cost caps or metrics (Content (3)(f); National advocate (4)).
- World Soil Day and National Soil Conservation Week are symbolic and do not ensure measurable improvements in soil conditions (Designation).