New report highlights locally-grown seed diversity in Canada
May 21, 2024 3:10 pm Leave your thoughtsOTTAWA, CANADA – May 21, 2024 – The non-profit organization, SeedChange, has published a new... View Article
OTTAWA, CANADA – May 21, 2024 – The non-profit organization, SeedChange, has published a new... View Article
Here's how you can find local seeds and keep seed diversity alive.
Just like the seeds we plant in our gardens, the vegetable seed industry in Canada is really diverse!
All across the country, farmers are restoring Canadian seed diversity. Even here, on this rooftop farm.
“There have been a lot of challenges. But a lot of learning too—that’s how I'm going to look at it.”
In this post, I want to think out loud about the role food justice plays in the larger fight for racial justice.
Our executive director spoke about working with farmers to ramp up seed production in the name of self-sufficiency.
Farmers everywhere are on the frontlines of climate change, writes SeedChange Executive Director, Jane Rabinowicz in The Hill Times.
Any conversation about climate change in 2020 must include agriculture.
We urge the Canadian government to uphold its commitments as a signatory to the UNDRIP.
Partnerships, crop breeding, conserving biodiversity... just a bit of what we do around the world.
The world lost 75 per cent of its crop diversity in the last century. But farmers in Canada are working to reverse the trend.
Farmers are impacted by the climate crisis, but the way they tend the land can help mitigate climate change.