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Environmental and Economic Impact Assessments of Environmental Regulations: A Case Study of Hog Farming

A multi-year research study was established under the environmental pillar of the Agriculture Policy Framework (APF) to evaluate the role and impact of existing farm level environmental regulations administered by local, provincial, federal governments. The Phase 1 study entitled “Inventory and Methodology for Assessing the Impacts of Environmental Regulations in the Agricultural Sector” was released in March 2006 on AAFC online.

There is a growing concern about the impact and effectiveness of environmental regulations, specifically impact on the competitiveness of primary agriculture. Empirical analysis is required to better understand the exact role that agri-environmental regulations play in determining a farm's cost structure and to compare difference between provinces within Canada. With this purpose in mind, in Phase 2, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC), has commissioned hog case study to increase the policy makers' and industry's understanding of the impact and role of environmental regulations in the farming sector.

The study estimated the compliance costs of existing agri-environmental regulations for a newly established -600 sow farrow to finish- hog facility in 2006. It was also assumed that the facility would follow good farming practices (i.e. sufficient land available to absorb the manure from the operation). The results show that environmental regulation compliance costs were generally less than 1% of total annual production cost.

For more information on this publication, please e-mail: Econ_Research@agr.gc.ca.


Environmental and Economic Impact Assessments of Environmental Regulations: A Case Study of Hog Farming (PDF version, 3.03 MB) - PDF Help

Publication: 06-097-RB - ISBN: 978-0-662-46050-3 - Catalogue: A38-4/12-2007E-PDF - Project: 06097r