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Moderate decline in British Columbia farms
Introduction
Farm size
Farm receipts
Farm type
Computer use
Organic farming
Other highlights of British Columbia agriculture
Moderate decline in British Columbia farms, according to 2001 Census
of Agriculture
The number of census farms in British Columbia declined
7.1% between 1996 and 2001, a moderate decrease compared with the rest
of Canada.
The 2001 Census of Agriculture
counted 20,290 census farms in British
Columbia. The decline, the smallest in the country, was lower than the
10.7% decrease at the national level.
However, the number of British Columbia farms has been relatively stable
during the past 40 years. Since 1961, the number of farms has actually
increased 1.8% in British Columbia. (A census farm is an agricultural
operation that produces an agricultural product intended for sale.)
The biggest decline in the number of farms occurred in the Southwest
region, where the number of farms decreased 14.1% to 5,733. The Thompson
Okanagan region reported 5,679 farms, down 4.3% from 1996.
British Columbia had 8% of Canada’s 246,923 farms in 2001, virtually
unchanged since 1996.
Farm size
While the overall number of farms in British Columbia has declined since
1996, their size in terms of area, herd sizes and gross farm receipts
has increased. The average British Columbia farm was 315 acres in 2001,
up 10.1% from 1996. Since 1981, the average farm size has increased 17.1%.
The total farm area in British Columbia increased 2.3% to 6,392,909 acres
since 1996. Cropland rose 9.2% to 1,525,986 acres. British Columbia’s
farmland made up 4% of the national total in 2001, unchanged from 1996.
Farm receipts
British Columbia’s total gross farm receipts were almost $2.3 billion
in 2000, while operating expenses reached $2.1 billion. While factors
such as the commodities they produced, the prices they received and the
weather they had to deal with made each farmer’s situation different,
in general, expenses rose slightly faster than revenues. Five years earlier,
at 1995 prices, receipts were $1.8 billion and expenses were $1.7 billion.
(The 2001 Census collected information on gross receipts and expenses
for 2000.)
Over the five-year period, prices farmers received for their products
increased by 7.8%, while prices they paid for expenses such as fertilizer
and fuel increased 9.8%. Farmers, squeezed by relative increasing costs,
had to increase farm productivity to keep the ratio of receipts-to-expenses
favourable.
In 2000, in British Columbia, the ratio of operating expenses to gross
farm receipts was 0.91:1, in other words, 91 cents of operating expenses
were spent for every dollar received in gross farm receipts. This compares
to 1995, when the expense to gross receipts ratio was 0.90:1. (Expenses
collected on the census do not include depreciation.)
The number of farms in all sales categories declined. Farms with gross
receipts of $250,000 or more decreased 3.4% from 1,933 farms in 1995 to
1,868 farms in 2000. While, these farms accounted for only 9% of all farms
in British Columbia, they had over 78% of the total gross receipts reported
for the province for the year 2000.
Farm type
Cattle farms are the most common types of farms in British Columbia accounting
for close to one-quarter (24.8%) of all farms, followed by fruit farms
with 14.5%, horse and pony farms with 12.6%, and hay and fodder crop farms
with 9.9%. Since 1996, the share of cattle farms increased while the share
of fruit farms declined within the province.
Computer use
The proportion of farms in British Columbia using a computer as a management
tool increased between 1996 and 2001. The census found that 8,146 farms
used computers, more than 40% of the total, up from 24% in 1996. The national
average was 39.4%.
Over 73% of British Columbia farms reporting a computer used it for word
processing, over 72% reported using it for bookkeeping, while 70% of farms
reported using the Internet.
Farms with higher sales were more likely to use a computer. In 2001,
72% of farms with sales of $250,000 or greater reported using a computer,
compared with only 34% of farms with sales under $25,000.
Organic farming
For the first time, farmers were able to report on their census forms
that they produced certified organic commodities. (In Canada, a farmer
who wishes to become "certified organic" must apply to a recognized
certification agency.)
According to the census, there were 319 organic farms in British Columbia
on Census Day. These made up 14% of organic farms in Canada.
The predominant certified organic products grown in British Columbia
were fruit, vegetable, or greenhouse products. These products were reported
on 84% of the province’s organic farms.
Other highlights of British Columbia agriculture:
- Although 42% of British Columbia farms are located in the Southwest
and the Islands, these areas account for only 6% of the total farm
area in the province. A third of agricultural land is located in the
Peace River Region, 23% in the Thompson Okanagan, and just under 20%
in the Cariboo.
- The Lower Mainland - Southwest region remains the most important
agricultural area in British Columbia. Occupying only 4% of the total
agricultural land in the province, more than one-quarter of the provincial
farms are found here and this region accounts for over 62% of gross
farm sales.
- British Columbia has the highest number of operations (3,988) reporting
tree fruits, berries and nuts in Canada, but ranks third in area (48,330 acres)
devoted to growing these commodities. Ontario and Quebec have more
land in this category. Over one-half of the fruit acreage in British
Columbia is located in the Thompson Okanagan region.
- More than one-half of Canada’s raspberry area is in British Columbia.
A total of 693 farms reported growing raspberries on 5,500 acres.
Grape area more than doubled and apple area, which accounts for nearly
one-quarter of Canada’s total, declined between 1996 and 2001.
- There were 1,292 farms reporting greenhouses in British Columbia.
Greenhouse area grew to nearly 50 million square feet from over
31 million square feet in 1996. More than three-quarters of the greenhouse
area are located in the Southwest region. British Columbia ranks second
after Ontario in the number of greenhouse operations and total greenhouse
area.
- The number of meat chickens (broilers, roasters and Cornish hens)
increased 45% to 14 million between 1996 and 2001. The number of laying
hens and pullets increased 18% to 4.8 million since 1996. Over 80%
of these birds are located in the Lower Mainland - Southwest region
of British Columbia.
- Some non-traditional operations have grown substantially. In 2001,
nearly 36% of the Canadian ginseng crop, or 2,527 acres, was grown
in British Columbia, mostly in Thompson Okanagan. This area was up
50% from 1996. The number of llamas and alpacas raised in British
Columbia more than doubled to 5,428, the second largest provincial
total after Alberta.
Statistics Canada thanks the British Columbia farming community
for participating in the 2001 Census of Agriculture.
A full statistical portrait of Canadian agriculture is available
in The Daily, Statistics Canada’s official release bulletin,
by accessing the Agency’s Website (/).
This press release contains data for the province, census agricultural
region (CAR), census division (CD) levels only. The data for the lowest
level of geography, census consolidated subdivision (CCS), will be
available on June 12, 2002.
For more information on this release, contact Gaye
Ward (613 951-3172), Census of Agriculture, or Media Relations (613
951-4636).
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