There’s a seed hero in Chatelaine

March 8, 2018
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Jane Rabinowicz, our executive director and very own seed hero, is featured in Chatelaine!

Photo: White Pine Pictures

To ensure we have the food we’ll need in the future, we have to save seeds today. That’s why saving seed diversity is so important. And that’s why SeedChange Executive Director, Jane Rabinowicz, is so passionate about it.

Jane, our very own seed hero, is featured in Chatelaine magazine where she discusses the importance of seed diversity and making sure it is in the hands of the real seed heroes – sorry Jane 😉 – farmers. Read it below!


Meet Jane Rabinowicz, Canada’s Seed Hero (Yes, We Need One. Badly)

The 20th century wasn’t kind to crop diversity: Thanks to the shift to large-scale farming that concentrated on a paltry selection of seeds, 90 per cent of North American fruit and vegetable varieties have gone extinct, and 75 per cent of crop diversity worldwide has been lost. At this rate, one-third of the seed varieties left will vanish by 2050.

That’s bad news for our taste buds, but it’s terrifying news for our changing climate. “We need crops that can withstand floods, drought and early frosts,” says Jane Rabinowicz, executive director at [SeedChange]. “The potato famine happened because two varieties of crop, grown on a huge scale, were devastated by a blight,” she says. “Diversity of crops, and diversity within crops, is basically an insurance policy.”

[SeedChange] works with farmers across Canada and the world to safeguard seeds, promote biodiversity, lobby government, and breed resilient new varieties. In Québec, for example, farmers dismayed with the basic, boring, available corn crossed heritage varieties worked with USC to create four brand new kinds, all organic and developed especially for Québécois growing conditions.

Among its many initiatives is the robust grow-out program, which identifies seeds that are at risk of going extinct, Rabinowicz says, “so we can get them in the hands of different farmers who plant the seeds, observe them, experiment with them and work to bulk that variety up.” So far, more than 100 Canadian farmers are helping to put 300 unique seeds back into circulation.