Skip to main content
Worker
Worker
February 02, 2022

The Canadian Produce Marketing Association (CPMA) welcomes the news that the Government of Canada will create a new Supply Chain Task Force. It’s to consult with industry to make recommendations on short and long-term ongoing supply chain disruptions. 

Since fall of 2021, CPMA has been working with industry partners to call for the creation of a Joint Industry-Government Task Force to address the significant impacts of supply chain disruptions, as outlined in a December letter to Prime Minister Trudeau and members of Cabinet.

“Substantial increases in costs and delays along the supply chain threaten our food security and long-term economic viability, and will result in rising food costs for Canadians,” said CPMA president Ron Lemaire. 

In November 2021, CPMA and other organizations from across the North American produce industry released a joint statement detailing ongoing supply chain disruptions facing the sector, including: crippling port congestion, delays and exploding costs in container shipping, cascading effects of inconsistent product delivery, continuing labour shortages, growing input shortages and stockpiling of consumer products.

In January 2022, CPMA’s North American Trade Working Group released a Supply Chain Solutions proposal, which outlined several potential areas of government action.

“The multi-faceted and interconnected challenges we face do not fall within the purview of any individual Canadian Minister or department,” said Lemaire. “It is imperative that the new Supply Chain Task Force brings together government departments and stakeholders to address ongoing supply chain disruptions in the short-term and support supply chainresiliency in the long-term. We look forward to continuing to work with the government to ensure the specific needs of the perishable fresh produce sector are taken into consideration.”

 

Source:  Canadian Produce Marketing Association February 1, 2022 news release

Standard (Image)
Thu, 02/03/2022 - 13:26
Worker
If latest news
Check if it is latest news (for "Latest News" page)
1 (Go to top of list)

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
Enter the characters shown in the image.
Submitted by Karen Davidson on 2 February 2022