Maple syrup producers see climate change as a threat to industry’s future
Paul Renaud is only too aware of what the power of wind can do to trees.
After violent windstorms recently swept through southern Ontario and Quebec, uprooting trees and leaving a trail of damage across a vast territory, Renaud’s thoughts went right to his sugar maples in Lanark Highlands, Ont., where storms once considered rogue now seem more frequent.
“We’ve had two in six months,” he said in an interview. “Each one has taken out maple trees.”
Worsening storms aren’t the only changes Renaud sees. As chair of the climate change working group for the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers Association, he says dramatic weather is having a serious effect on his industry.