Andres Riofrio

Agriculture has been one of my family’s passions for
many generations. I must have been six years old when I closed a deal
with a local cheese maker to raise the price of milk produced at my parent’s
hobby-farm in my native Ecuador. Although the additional “quarter
of a cent” per litre that the cheese maker offered must have been
insignificant to what my Dad earned as a lawyer, I certainly believed
that I started a successful career in agribusiness.
A few years later, I formalised my education and obtained
a B.Sc. degree in Agribusiness (USFQ –Ecuador). My early attempts
to increase productivity on our dairy farm awakened my interest in cost-efficient
and sustainable food production. This interest was further stimulated
while involved in the organic fruit industry in the UK, hence I decided
to pursue a degree in Agricultural Economics at McGill University, where
I have been working under the shared-supervision of Dr. John Henning (McGill),
and Dr. Emmanuel Yiridoe (NSAC).
Currently, I am carrying out an economic analysis of crop rotation systems
under transition to organic agriculture. I am using enterprise budgeting
to analyse data from a four-year field experiment conducted by other graduate
students working with the OACC. The purpose of my study is to investigate
the profitability of the three years prior obtaining organic certification
and the first year of production under a fully-certified organic operation
in Atlantic Canada. The rotations studied are primarily distinguished
by the source of soil amendments and the number of years of forage in
rotation. Part of my work is to develop a linear programming model to
simulate various whole-farm scenarios to determine the most financially
viable strategy to convert to organic.
Preliminary results have indicated that forage-based crop rotations under
both monogastric and ruminant compost are likely to be better alternatives
in the conversion from conventional to organic agriculture. In addition,
it is likely that, economic returns generated by ruminant cattle that
benefit from forages produced for fertility-building purposes, could ease
the financial challenges of the transition to organic.
Dr. Andrew Hammermeister (from the OACC) and Kui Liu, (a PhD candidate
at the NSAC) have been collaborating in my study the past year.
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