?> How is the commercial beekeeping industry in Canada (a country with a
cost base similar to the US)?
Actually, generalizing across a large and diverse country, the cost base
and risk profile is very different different. Our replacement bees are much
more expensive and the supply uncertain -- and the risk of loss is higher.
On the other hand, our return on honey remained much higher, albeit still
low, during the really tough years for US beekeeping in the last decade.
When the US dollar went high, the Canadian dollar didn't. It dropped to 63c
and so the returns on honey were not as bad as they got for US beekeepers
and that made a huge difference. Costs, other than bees, did not go up
much.
I wrote a study back in 2003 examining the industry health two countries and
concluded that the largest single factor driving down US hive numbers,--
besides destruction of bee habitat and increasing regulation -- was the
strong US dollar.
My interest at the time was the influence of the border closure on Canadian
beekeeping, and what effect it was having on the industry, so an examination
of US beekeeping at the time was a logical comparison.
My conclusion was that regulation -- border closure and cutting of the bee
supply -- was the cause of the decline in Canadian hive numbers, while the
strong US dollar and the consequent lack of competitiveness in the face of
subsidized foreign honey imports (a double whammy) hit the US beekeepers.
In each country, pollination has been a blessing and a curse. Pollination
has been a major catalyst in moving pests and disease around each country,
but in both cases, it has kept beekeepers alive with intravenous cash
infusions, but some would say the industry is alive on life-support only.
Pollination has been a major catalyst in moving pests and disease around
each country, but at the same time is the only reason that we have such
great PR and broad public sympathy in societies which otherwise are
characterised by insect phobias.
All in all, when looking at Canada, we have to separate Alberta from the
rest of the country. Although Alberta has no more or better forage than
other provinces, it has grown steadily in hive numbers , with only a decade
or so of decrease immediately after border closure.
Why? I can only ascribe Alberta's success to the people and the
government. The beekeepers co-operate strongly with one another, and the
government is supportive of industry initiatives and very light on
regulation.
Nothing else is much different, from the rest of the country, in which most
provinces are languishing, staying even, or having almost no beekeeping --
other than the decision of major seed companies to concentrate canola seed
growing in Alberta's south.
That certainly did not hurt, since it added a fairly reliable income
component, but even then, the number of hives required for pollination has
fluctuated up and down, with some periods of severe reductions in hive
rentals that did not seem to hurt the industry at all.
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