20   SEEDWORLD.COM/CANADA   JULY 2026
RE: AAFC’S SCIENCE FOOTPRINT IS CHANGING — ITS COMMITMENT 
TO INNOVATION IS NOT, MARCH SEED WORLD CANADA
Canada’s grains and oilseeds sector depends on innovation. 
Yet the recent decision to close key Agriculture and Agri-Food 
Canada (AAFC) research locations — Lacombe, Indian Head, 
Scott, and Portage la Prairie — puts decades of hard-won 
progress at risk.
These closures threaten not only the return on public invest­
ment, but also the long-term competitiveness and sustainability 
of Prairie agriculture. These sites are not administrative con­
veniences. They are highly predictive, agro-ecologically distinct 
research environments — exactly the kinds of places required 
to develop broadly adapted crop varieties that perform under 
real-world conditions.
While AAFC leadership has stated that research will be 
“consolidated and not discontinued,” consolidation in plant 
breeding is a false efficiency. It narrows the innovation pipeline, 
increases on-farm risk, and undermines resilience at precisely 
the moment farmers need it most.
What Farmers Actually Need
Farmers are not asking for “me too” varieties. They need 
continual improvement of varieties that reduce business risk 
and support long-term viability — plants that tolerate heat and 
drought, withstand increasingly erratic weather, and offer dura­
ble resistance to multiple diseases and pests, especially Fusarium 
head blight. These varieties must also fit reduced-tillage systems 
and diverse production practices across Western Canada.
Delivering that kind of performance is not a desk exercise. 
It requires exposing large numbers of experimental lines to 
diverse stresses, year after year, in carefully chosen environ­
ments. Occasionally, a truly exceptional line emerges — one 
that stands head and shoulders above the rest. 
But those rare outliers can only be identified when breed­
ers have access to the right locations. Closing ecologically 
distinct research sites reduces the odds of finding these genetic 
breakthroughs and slows the delivery of innovation the sector 
depends on.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
“CONSOLIDATION” IS A FALSE EFFICIENCY 
IN CROP BREEDING
Centralizing AAFC research may save costs on paper, but it narrows genetic discovery, increases 
farm risk and slows agricultural innovation, write three former AAFC breeders.
By Ron DePauw, Rob Graf and Jennifer Mitchell-Fetch
Why Place Matters in Plant Breeding
The challenges facing Prairie crop production arise every year, 
but not always in the same places or combinations. Drought, 
heat, disease pressure, and excess moisture appear unpredict­
ably — sometimes at a few locations, sometimes across many. 
Some research sites have far greater predictive capacity than 
others. Indian Head, Scott, Lacombe, and Portage la Prairie are 
precisely such locations for grains and oilseeds.
Broadly adapted gene combinations are extraordinarily rare. 
They are only discovered when selection pressure is applied 
across multiple environments and multiple seasons. Remove 
sites from the breeding network, and you remove the very con­
ditions that make discovery possible.
A Proven Return on Investment
The benefit-to-cost ratio of public variety development has been 
estimated at 32 to 1 for both farmers and taxpayers. Few public 
investments deliver such consistent long-term value. Removing 
Indian Head, Scott, Lacombe, and Portage la Prairie from the 
research network isn’t cost-cutting — it removes the tools that 
generate returns.
Yes, efficiencies can be achieved. But dismantling applied 
research infrastructure that pays the bills is not efficiency, it is 
erosion of capacity when we need it most.
A Call for a New Way Forward
Consolidation is not a solution for genetic enhancement. 
Canada needs a new way to organize crop improvement — one 
that recognizes the irreplaceable value of place, diversity, and 
sustained investment in applied agricultural science. Producing 
improved varieties takes more than talk. It takes land, time, 
expertise, and commitment to keep the right tools in breeders’ 
hands.
—DePauw, Graf and Mitchell-Fetch are retired AAFC 
plant breeders

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