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Canadian Wheat Board

Prairie strong, worldwide

Newsroom

2007

Prairie wheat in the spotlight on national stage

September 20, 2007

Winnipeg - The CWB and Robin Hood flour today launched a national campaign to promote Prairie-grown wheat to Canadian consumers.

"Just as Florida has its oranges and California its raisins, we want to make Western Canada synonymous with wheat," CWB President and CEO Greg Arason said.

The major branding initiative - the first of its kind for both partners - will raise awareness of the high quality of Prairie wheat among Canadian consumers through labelling on Robin Hood flour bags and other promotional activities.

"The wheat grown by western Canadian farmers is the best in the world - we know it, farmers know it and our customers around the globe know it," Arason said. "Now millions of Canadian consumers will get the message too."

The campaign is the CWB’s first major national foray into co-branding. It will include a CWB wheat quality message and label on five million bags of Robin Hood flour, a message about the goodness of western Canadian wheat in about 3.5 million "Baking is Back" recipe booklets now being distributed in stores and magazines, as well as store displays and online contests.

"As Canada’s leading flour producer, Robin Hood is committed to supplying Canadian consumers with the best flour in the world: flour made with 100-per-cent Canadian wheat," said Cheryl Malton, spokesperson for Smucker Foods of Canada, owner of Robin Hood.

Robin Hood flour is milled in facilities across the country, including a mill in Saskatoon. "We have a 98-year relationship with Canadian consumers, dating back to our roots in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan," Malton added. "We know Canadian consumers also feel supportive of Prairie farm families, so this is a natural partnership."

The campaign aligns with consumers’ desire to eat identifiable Canadian-grown food. A 2007 Canadian Federation of Agriculture (CFA) survey showed 95 per cent of consumers would choose Canadian products over imports if doing so improved the viability of family farms. Ninety per cent wanted Canadian-grown food to be easily identifiable. The CFA, Canada’s largest farm group, has made creation of a "Canadian-grown" food labelling system the top issue it would like the federal government to address this fall.

Western Canadian farmers support promotion of their products’ quality. In a recent CWB survey, over 80 per cent of farmers thought the CWB should brand Prairie wheat.

Click image to view chart
The campaign also celebrates the return to popularity of healthy, grain-based foods. Per-capita flour consumption is on the rise in North America since it hit record lows in 2004, largely due to low-carbohydrate diets. "The renewed popularity of grain-based foods is very positive for farmers, the milling industry and the health of Canadian consumers," Arason said, adding the CWB helps fund a campaign called "Grains, They’re Essential!" to battle the low-carb fad. The CWB has also created a Web site at www.prairiewheat.ca about the goodness of Prairie wheat.

Controlled by western Canadian farmers, the CWB is the largest wheat and barley marketer in the world. One of Canada's biggest exporters, the Winnipeg-based organization sells grain to over 70 countries and returns all sales revenue, less marketing costs to farmers.

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For more information, please contact:

Maureen Fitzhenry,
CWB media relations manager
(204) 983-3101
Cell: (204) 227-6927
maureen_fitzhenry@cwb.ca

Cheryl Malton
Smucker Foods of Canada
(905) 940-7578
cheryl.malton@jmsmucker.com

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