Farms.com Home   News

Managing risk with agriculture insurance

Protecting the house and car with insurance is commonplace, but when it comes to crops, insurance coverage isn’t as universally embraced.
 
Nova Scotia's Minister of Agriculture Keith Colwell explains crop insurance adds some predictability to producers’ businesses.
 
Adverse weather, disease and insect infestations can have a serious impact on production and income, so having insurance is important, he says.
 
“It protects against the effects of yield reductions and crop losses caused by insured perils,” says Colwell. “AgriInsurance helps maintain cashflow in poor crop years with claim payments that offset losses caused by crop damage and low yields that are beyond their control.” Provinces across Canada offer public and private insurance coverage.
 
For instance, production insurance from Ontario’s AgriCorp, a provincial Crown corporation, has plans for over 100 commodities and covers yield reductions and production losses caused by weather, disease, wildlife and insects.
 
Hail
 
On the Canadian Prairies, hail is one of the leading risks to crops, and no other kind of disaster produces as sudden and devastating an impact, says Canadian Crop Hail Association president Rick Omelchenko.
 
“You can have a crop that’s producing 100 bushels per acre, and then all of a sudden, the next day, it’s like summer fallow,” Omelchenko says.
 
But not all farmers protect themselves with crop hail insurance. With tight margins, farmers seek cost savings anywhere they can, he says.
 
While the value of seed and inputs is obvious, “insurance is a piece of paper until you need it.”
 
Buyer’s remorse isn’t unusual when it comes to crop hail insurance: “When they don’t get hail, they’ve bought too much. When they get hail, they haven’t bought enough,” Omelchenko says.
 
He says farmers don’t have to choose between buying insurance or being left uncovered. They could purchase enough coverage to cover their costs, but also take a deductible to maximize their dollars to get as much coverage as possible.
 
CCHA recommends producers have hail coverage in place early in the season as they might be unable to purchase it after storm damage, meaning they’d be left to carry the full risk for the rest of the year.
 
AgExpert
 
Crop insurance can be time-consuming, but FCC AgExpert aims to save farmers time on bookkeeping and paperwork, says program director Darcy Herauf.
 
With AgExpert Field Premium, customers can enter their data, and the program will generate reports for seeded area, harvest production, and stored inventory.
Source : FCC

Trending Video

Evolution of Beef Cattle Farming

Video: Evolution of Beef Cattle Farming

The Clear Conversations podcast took to the road for a special episode recorded in Nashville during CattleCon, bringing listeners straight into the heart of the cattle industry. Host Tracy Sellers welcomed rancher Steve Wooten of Beatty Canyon Ranch in Colorado for a wide-ranging discussion that blended family history and sustainability, particularly as it relates to the future of beef production.

Sustainability emerged as a central theme of the conversation, a word that Wooten acknowledges can mean very different things depending on who you ask. For him, sustainability starts with the soil. Healthy soil produces healthy grass, which supports efficient cattle capable of producing year after year with minimal external inputs. It’s an approach that equally considers vegetation, animal efficiency, and long-term profitability.

That philosophy aligned naturally with Wooten’s involvement in the U.S. Roundtable for Sustainable Beef, where he served as a representative for the Colorado Cattlemen’s Association. The roundtable brings together the entire beef supply chain—from producers to retailers—along with universities, NGOs, and allied industries. Its goal is not regulation, Wooten emphasized, but collaboration, shared learning, and continuous improvement.