Quote:
Originally Posted by wg_flamip
The Greenbelt's purpose isn't to freeze today's land uses in perpetuity but rather to protect fertile and ecologically sensitive land for the future. As the pandemic taught us, we can't expect today's supply lines to last forever, and climate change lurks on the horizon. In the event of a future food security crisis, horse farms are far easier to transition to productive agriculture than suburban subdivisions.
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I already disproved the land shortage/food security myth on the last page.
Canada has the 3rd most arable land per capita in the world of all countries. (
source)
We have the 6th most total arable land in the world. (
source)
NOTE - if you follow the link you'll see that the total sqkm has actually gone up the last decade.
Our wheat yield/hectare is 12th in the world (
source)
Our maize yield/hectare is 6th in the world (
source)
Our soybean yield/hectare is 4th in the world (
source)
We have the 7th most cattle per capita (
source)
We produce the 10th most maize in the world by total (
source)
We export half of our beef/cattle, 70% of our soybeans, 70% of our pork, 75% of our wheat, 90% of our canola, and 95% of our pulses. (
source)
Canada isn't a good place to grow fruit (shocking), however of the fruit that we do grow, 50% of that is berries, and we export more than half of it (
source)
Canada is a NET exporter of food, exporting $66B of food per year, and importing $48B of food/year (
source)
We are the world's 3rd largest producer of primary fertilizers, and the largest producer of potash fertilizer (
source). In fact, 12% of the world's fertilizer comes from Canada, and 95% of the fertilizer Canada produces gets exported (
source)
If that's not enough, we are expected to gain 4.2 million sqkm of agricultural land in the coming decades thanks to climate change (
source).
We also produce the 8th most total electricity in the world (
source), the 6th most natural gas in the world (
source). Per capita we produce the 6th most electricity (
source) and 10th most natural gas (
source). Of the natural gas we produce, 61% gets exported (
source). Additionally, we are NET exporter of natural gas by a massive ratio (
source). So in the imaginary food security scenario, we have more than enough energy to grow in Greenhouses what we can't grow naturally in our climate.
All the Class 1 soil people like to bring up hasn't disappeared, it was just moved to peoples' backyards. The house only takes up a small percentage of the land on a property, the rest is the backyard, and there is nothing stopping you from growing your own food. In fact multiple DIY sites say that you only need 1000 sqft of land to grow enough food for a family of four for an entire year (
source). The average backyard is a lot bigger than that. So in the imaginary food crisis scenario, the people who will be screwed the most are those living in condos because they won't have a yard to grow their own food in.
We have plenty of problems in Canada, but a lack of land or capacity to grow food isn't one of them - in fact it's not even a remote possibility. We have hundreds of thousands of sqkms of land to feed us, we have more fertilizer than we could ever need, we have more energy we could ever need. Globally, we are in one of the best positions if there ever were some sort of a food security crisis. Allowing a couple hundred extra sqkm of land to be developed around our largest city won't make even make a dent on this.
Prior to the Greenbelt/Places-to-Grow legislations the GTA already had the highest population density of any metro-area in all of English-speaking North America. Literally every other metro area in Canada and the US had (and continues to have) a lower population density than the GTA. This includes Vancouver, New York, SF/Oakland and LA.
Greenbelt and Places to Grow are rooted in ideology, not facts. Our current policy was designed to solve a non-existent imaginary problem, but has created multiple other very real problems as a by-product. However thanks to the Greenbelt and Places-to-Grow acts, the average Canadian is far more likely to die from homelessness than than they ever were from hunger.