
‘It feels personal’: Canadian farmers cope with Chinese tariffs on canola and peas
Canola runs deep on Margaret Rigetti’s farm in southern Saskatchewan.
Her grandfather was among the first to grow the bright yellow flowering crop in the 1970s, and it has been a staple ever since.
“For a large part of Saskatchewan, the farm economy has been driven by canola,” Rigetti, a director with SaskOilseeds, says in an interview on her land near Moose Jaw.
“It feels personal when people come after canola, just because it’s such a Canadian story, such a western Canadian story, such a Saskatchewan story and such a story that’s right here on my farm.”