U.S. nixes October joint hog report Thursday, October 4, 2012 by SUSAN MANNA reduction in the frequency of the Statistics Canada hog survey report is a cutback in the quality and quantity of information that can influence decision makers and entrepreneurs, says agricultural economist Ken McEwan, of the University of Guelph’s Ridgetown campus.The change in the report’s frequency has also prompted the United States to cancel publication of the joint hog report it completes with Canada that was to be due out later this month.Earlier this year, Statistics Canada changed the frequency of its hog survey to twice a year from four times annually. Data for the July and January reference periods will continue to be collected and published. The October and April collections are discontinued.McEwan says there could potentially be huge impacts for farmers from the reduction in the frequency of the report because “it only takes modest changes in supply to have huge impacts on demand, which then affects price.”The joint Canada/U.S. report contains an inventory of the 6.2 million pigs on the North American continent, he says. The USDA reports its data right down to the state level and it’s “very interesting to see what states are growing, what states are shrinking and by how much along with what’s likely to be coming on the market within the next six months.”McEwan notes “one of the important things about supply and demand and business environments and entrepreneurship is access to information and having quality of information and this is a clawback in that quality of information.”But Bill Parsons, Statistics Canada commodity section chief, says ‘the feeling was the (hog) industry was stable enough that we only needed to measure it twice a year.”The two hog surveys Statistics Canada is still doing yearly should be “sufficient to see any changes that are coming along within the industry,” he says. The data is still available and is now free on the Internet whereas previously there was a fee for the hog publication.Statistics Canada announced the frequency change in the hog report on its website June 27 along with a number of changes to agricultural and other reports. The changes were made to “meet savings targets announced in the Economic Action Plan, 2012 of $33.9 million by 2014-15,” the agency says in its announcement.“To meet its commitments, Statistics Canada has focused resources where they are most needed,” the agency says. It claims savings incurred through these program adjustments “represent moderate reductions in the production of statistics.”Parsons says the changes were made as “part of the restructuring and the budget restrictions.”The United States Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service announced this month that it wouldn’t publish the United States and Canadian Hogs Publication, scheduled for release Oct. 29 at 1 p.m. The next joint report is scheduled for February 2013.Bruce Boess, USDA’s statistics service section head for poultry and specialty commodities, explains they can’t do the report on their own because they need the Canadian data. The USDA is continuing to do its hog reports four times a year.For Statistics Canada, some changes to other agricultural reports include:• Farm cash receipts is being released semi annually instead of quarterly;• Farm product price index is being released quarterly instead of monthly;• Farm product prices survey - the potato, straw and hay, grain and oilseed and grain and specialty crop prices are all discontinued while other components of the survey will continue; and• Fruit and vegetable survey is being released once a year instead of twice a year. The spring data collection has been discontinued for this survey. BF Existing programs may not save pork producers When a vocal minority calls the shots
July Heat Wave Puts Midwest Corn and Soybeans Under Pressure Wednesday, July 1, 2026 A dangerous early July heat wave is expected to test U.S. corn and soybean crops - as if they have not already been tested enough -- as the growing season moves into a critical period for yield development. Nutrien agricultural meteorologist Eric Snodgrass says the next two weeks will... Read this article online
Canada Day Spotlight: Brandt Drives Canadian Agriculture Forward Wednesday, July 1, 2026 As Canadians celebrate Canada Day, the country’s agriculture sector offers a powerful reminder of the innovation and resilience that define the industry. Among the companies helping shape modern farming is the Brandt Group of Companies, a Regina, Saskatchewan-based organization that... Read this article online
Canadian Ag Company AGI Marks 30 Years of Global Growth Wednesday, July 1, 2026 As Canadians mark Canada Day, one homegrown agriculture company is also celebrating a major milestone. Ag Growth International Inc. (AGI), a Winnipeg-based provider of equipment and solutions for agriculture, food and commercial markets, is marking 30 years in business in 2026. The... Read this article online
P&H is a Canadian Grain Leader Wednesday, July 1, 2026 As part of our series on Canadian agriculture companies on Canada Day, we take a look at Parrish & Heimbecker, Limited (P&H), a family-owned agribusiness with roots dating back more than a century. Founded in 1909, the company has grown into one of Canada’s largest integrated... Read this article online
AI Helps Turn Farm Byproducts into Value Wednesday, July 1, 2026 Canada is advancing its agricultural and food processing sector with a new project focused on artificial intelligence. Protein Industries Canada has partnered with Crush Dynamics and Atomic47 Labs to develop an advanced AI-powered fermentation platform. This new system uses existing... Read this article online