In Kelowna, B.C., an unprecedented winter cold snap led Jennifer Deol and her husband to remove over a hectare of peach trees from their orchard. Early January's extreme temperatures inflicted severe damage on stone-fruit trees and grapevines throughout the Okanagan Valley, destroying the buds destined to become this season's harvest.
As a response, Deol, among other orchardists, is transitioning to more resilient crops to compensate for the losses and adapt to the recent surge in extreme weather events affecting British Columbia's farms. Deol remarked, "Not even a single [peach] flower bloomed. We knew that we had to get ahead of this and pivot." The couple faces the risk of bankruptcy within a couple of years if their adaptation strategies do not succeed.
The decision to replace mature peach trees, once capable of producing record-sized fruit, with table grapes and corn marks a significant shift in their farming approach. Deol expressed the challenges faced by farmers who, despite their resilience, are deeply affected by such losses, stating, "It's very tough. Farmers are very resilient, but we're still humans at the end of the day and this is our livelihood. This is our income."
British Columbia, hosting the highest number of fruit farms in the country, predominantly in the Okanagan Valley, is witnessing the impacts of climate change on its tree fruit sector, which is valued over $450 million annually. With cherries, apples, and peaches as the leading crops, the region experienced a nearly two per cent drop in fruit sales last year due to reduced yields, with expectations of a more severe impact following this year's freeze.
Source: cbc.ca