AFSC Extends Seeding Dates in Parts of Alberta After Wet Spring Delays


Agriculture Financial Services Corp. (AFSC) is extending recommended seeding dates and crop insurance deadlines for several crops in parts of northern Alberta following an unusually wet and prolonged spring that has delayed field operations across the province. 

The changes apply for the 2026 growing season only and affect the North East, North West, and Peace regions. Above-average snowfall in April, lingering winter conditions, and continued rainfall through May have created excessive soil moisture in many areas, particularly across central, eastern, and northern Alberta, AFSC said in a release Monday. 

The wet conditions have slowed seeding progress and raised concerns that many producers may struggle to plant crops within the timelines required under AFSC’s crop insurance program, the release said. Crops with normal seeding deadlines between May 25 and June 1 were considered especially vulnerable to delays if rainy weather persists and fields remain inaccessible, it added.

AFSC said the temporary extensions are intended to reduce pressure on producers while still protecting the integrity of the crop insurance program. 

“Alberta producers are resilient and have the ability to plant the crop quickly if the weather cooperates,” said Jesse Cole, AFSC manager of Insurance Products and Product Innovation. “However, it is important to help alleviate the pressure that producers are feeling without adding undue risk to the insurance program. To this end, seeding extensions have been granted depending on the crop.” 

Under the changes, seeding deadlines for lentils and field peas have been extended in the affected regions. Producers who seed within the revised deadlines will remain eligible for crop insurance coverage, while acres planted after the new deadlines will not qualify. 

AFSC has also extended recommended seeding dates for several other crops. Producers who seed within the updated recommended dates will continue to qualify for quality or grade-loss coverage under the insurance program. However, crops seeded after those dates may not be eligible for compensation for quality losses unless the damage is considered widespread across the region. 

AFSC said the June 20 deadline for filing Land Reports remains unchanged.  

Tables showing the crops and extended deadlines can be found here: 

https://afsc.ca/news/afsc-extending-seeding-dates-for-the-2026-crop-year/




Source: DePutter Publishing Ltd.

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