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Sharp decline in number of farms in AlbertaFarm size Farm receipts Farm type Computer use Organic farming Other highlights of Alberta agriculture Sharp decline in number of farms in Alberta, according to 2001 Census of AgricultureThe number of census farms in Alberta declined sharply between 1996 and 2001, more than offsetting an increase recorded in 1996. The 2001 Census of Agriculture counted 53,652 census farms in Alberta, a 9.1% decline during the past five years. This was lower than the 10.7% decrease at the national level, but the largest decrease since 1971. In 1996, there were 59,007 census farms in Alberta, a 3.1% increase from 1991 and the sole exception to a downward trend since 1941. Even with this decline, Alberta still had the second-highest number of census farms among the provinces. Ontario was first with 59,728 farms, while Newfoundland and Labrador with 643 had the fewest. (A census farm is an agricultural operation that produces an agricultural product intended for sale.) Despite the decline, Alberta’s share of farms nationwide has increased slightly since the last 2001 Census of Agriculture . In 1996, Alberta accounted for slightly over 21% of the national total. By 2001, that share had grown to just under 22%, ahead of Saskatchewan with slightly less than 21%. While the overall number of farms in Alberta has been declining, the size in terms of area, herd sizes and gross farm receipts has been increasing. The average Alberta farm was 970 acres in 2001, up 10.2% from 1996. Since 1996, Alberta’s total agricultural land has increased 0.2% to 52.1 million acres. It has 31% of the agricultural land in Canada, behind first place Saskatchewan. Area under crops increased 1.9% to 24 million acres, again the second largest area in Canada. Alberta’s total gross farm receipts were $9.9 billion in 2000, while operating expenses reached $8.9 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 $7.9 billion and expenses were $6.7 billion. (The 2001 Census collected information on gross receipts and expenses for 2000.) Over the five-year period, prices farmers received for their products declined by 7.0%, while prices they paid for expenses such as fertilizer and fuel increased by 11.9%. Farmers, squeezed by increasing costs and declining value of many of the products they sold, had to increase farm productivity to keep the ratio of receipts-to-expenses favorable. Alberta is the largest agricultural province in terms of gross receipts, accounting for 26% of the Canadian total. The next largest province is Ontario with $9.1 billion or 24% of the Canadian total. In 2000, in Alberta, the ratio of operating expenses to gross farm receipts was 0.90:1; in other words, 90 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 0.84:1. (Expenses collected on the Census do not include depreciation.) While the number of farms with less than $250,000 of gross farm receipts fell by 13.4% between censuses, those with $250,000 or more increased by 35.6%. There were 7,006 of these larger farms in Alberta in 2001, and while they represented 13% of the farms in the province, they accounted for 73% of the total provincial gross farm receipts reported for the year 2000. Cattle farms are the most common types of farms in Alberta accounting for 44% of all farms. Wheat, grain and oilseeds farms make up about one-quarter (24.7%) of the farms. There has been very little change in these shares since 1996. The proportion of Alberta farms using a computer as a management tool nearly doubled between 1996 and 2001. About 41% of farmers in the province were using a computer to run their business on Census Day, compared with 23% in 1996. In 2001, 78% of farmers used computers for bookkeeping, 72% for surfing the Internet, and about 69% used them for word processing – 84% of farming operations with a computer used it for more than one application. 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 197 certified organic farms in Alberta on Census Day, 0.4% of all farms in the province. Nearly three-quarters of the certified organic farms in Alberta reported field crops. Other highlights of Alberta agriculture:
Statistics Canada thanks the Alberta 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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