ALUS Outaouais was launched in 2021. The program is a partnership between ALUS and Fédération de l’UPA de Outaouais-Laurentides (FUPAOL).
In the southwestern region of Quebec, Outaouais is comprised of 5 regional county municipalities (RCM) and 67 local municipalities and covers an area of nearly 30,000 square kilometres on the traditional territory of the Algonquin First Nation. Outaouais is bordered by Ontario, Abitibi-Témiscamingue and the Laurentians and is mostly wooded and dotted with numerous hills, rivers and lakes.
Agriculture in the Outaouais region is concentrated along the plains of the Ottawa and Gatineau rivers and their main tributaries. With a population of nearly 400,000, the agricultural industry is comprised of many small operations, with the producers in the region primarily cultivating cattle, forage, cereals, vegetable and fruit for market distribution.
ALUS Outaouais intends to help meet locally set targets to improve biodiversity and water quality in and around the streams. In addition, it aims to recover endangered species such as the bobolink, eastern meadowlark, grasshopper sparrow, barn swallow, red-headed woodpecker, golden winged warbler, western chorus frog and blanding’s turtle. ALUS can support many different types of ecological projects on agricultural land to help provide habitat for these species.
By December 2022, almost 124 acres of ALUS projects had been registered on 27 farms. Most of these projects would include: grassland reserves not grazed until July 1 or mowed until July 15, riparian buffers and windbreaks seeded with native plant species.
ALUS Outaouais will undertake these projects as an extension of its legal entity FUPAOL, which is committed to the implementation of the ALUS program. The Federation is an agricultural trade union, which bases its raison d’être and its actions on values of respect for the individual, solidarity, collective action, social justice, equity and democracy. Its mission is to promote, defend and develop the professional, economic, social and moral interests of its members.
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Driving Environmental Outcomes with Support from WWF-Canada and Aviva Canada
With this support, ALUS continues to showcase how farmers are important participants in driving environmental resilience.Delayed haying project undertaken in ALUS Outaouais. Allowing native grasses to grow later in the season provides habitat for species at risk and...
ALUS strengthens its presence in Quebec with the launch of two new communities
The ALUS program takes root in Chaudière-Appalaches, the Laurentians and in Laval and Montreal Saint-Vallier-de-Bellechasse and Sainte-Sophie, Octobre 11th and 12th, 2023 On the 11th and 12th of October, ALUS officially launched two new communities in...
ALUS Partners with Albo Climate to Leverage Remote Sensing and Machine Learning for New Acre Project Quantification
ALUS partners with climate-tech start-up, Albo Climate, to apply novel remote sensing models to tree and shrub projects in support of ALUS’ New Acre Project carbon quantification efforts ALUS Tree planting project in Montérégie, Quebec, Canada Toronto,...
ALUS Outaouais Coordinators
Maria Jose Maezo
Stephanie Hedrei
Entente sectorielle de développement du secteur bioalimentaire de l’Outaouais (ESBO) – Government of Quebec
Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) Species at Risk Partnership on Agricultural Lands (SARPAL) Program
MRC de Papineau
Justin Alary
President of the PAC and and Agricultural Producer (ferme Stepido)
Brian Maloney
Rancher (ferme Brylee)
Abbigail Spencer
Agricultural Producer (Ferme Réservoir Senc.)
Claude Vallières
Agricultural Producer (Grands gibiers du Bois-Francs)
Gema Villaciencio
Agricultural Producer (Pure conscience Senc.)
Carl Savignac
Terrestrial Wildlife Biologist and Project Manager, Canadian Wildlife Federation
Anne Budge
Project Manager in natural environment management, Conseil régional de l’environnement et du développement durable de l’Outaouais (CREDDO)
Marion Duflos
General Manager, ABV-7 (Agence bassins versants 7)