Alberta Bee News
August 2022
Introducing the Canadian Beekeepers Federation
A new and ambitious organization that will represent the nationâs commercial-scale beekeepers. By Kieran Brett, Bootprint Marketing, on behalf of Canadian Beekeepers Federation Facing a series of ongoing challenges, Canadaâs commercial beekeepers are calling for new approaches that will deliver progress and success for their operations in the coming years.
Technology that lags far behind what todayâs commercial beekeeper needs, in areas such as hive health and extraction efficiency.
A growing number of these beekeepers are putting their support behind a new organization: the Canadian Beekeepers Federation (CBF).
A Canadian bee research program thatâs under-funded and poorly managed compared to the more ambitious and extensive bee research in the U.S.
âIn Canada, there is a wide gap between commercial beekeepers and hobby beekeepers,â says CBF President Mike Paradis of Paradis Honey in Girouxville, Alberta. âIn fact, 20% of beekeepers manage 98% of the colonies in Canada. We represent beekeepers with between 500 hives all the way up to 15,000 hives.â
Limited and often costly chemical options to protect hives from disease and insect threats. Counterproductive trade rules between Canada and the U.S. and between Canadian provinces. âThe big issue overall is that the commercial beekeeper needs to find ways to stay in business,â says Paradis. âFrom winter losses to trade and research, what weâre doing now in Canada isnât working for the commercial operator. We need fresh ideas and bold action.â As Paradis and others introduce the new Canadian Beekeepers Federation to commercial operators, most are quick to jump on board. A planned website and communications campaign will raise awareness with beekeepers, associations with shared interests and government stakeholders.
Paradis explains that while the hobbyist bee movement has been positive for the industry, the needs of commercial beekeepers are starkly different. He questions whether the Canadian Honey Council is prepared and equipped to engage with commercial beekeepersâ biggest challenges. In Paradisâs view, this has taken place against a backdrop of serious production and policy issues in recent years, including: Chronically high overwintering losses, with the U.S. border closed to bee package imports and increasingly problematic air transport from the southern hemisphere.
âRight now, itâs mostly growing by word of mouth,â says Paradis. âI fully expect that, ultimately, we will have 85% of commercial producers with us. We are working to advance the interests of the commercial beekeeper in Canada and we are here to stay.â
Inexpensive, poor-quality imported honey taking market share from pure, authentic Canadian honey.
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www.albertabeekeepers.ca