Business

Business

‘The water can’t get away’

Gabrielle Piché 6 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

Manitoba crop insurance payouts will likely exceed $15 million this year — before factoring in recent flooding in the Interlake and Parkland regions. Total costs won’t be fully known until year end.

Meantime, as dozens of local communities declare states of emergency, some farmers are calling for greater infrastructure investment, saying damage could’ve been avoided with better drainage maintenance.

“You can do as much ditching as you want in a field, but if it gets to municipality ditches or the provincial ditches and it can’t flow away, it just doesn’t help anything,” said Ryan Elliot.

He farms roughly 6,000 acres with his father near Stonewall. About one-third of their crop — wheat, canola — has been completely destroyed by rain, Elliot said. He estimates another third is “heavily damaged.”

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Business

A Manitoba First Nation and former national chief are throwing their weight behind new-to-Manitoba energy storage methods amid projections of squeezed energy availability.

The province doesn’t have any utility scale battery energy storage systems. Through these, electricity is kept in electrochemical batteries until needed.

Volterra Technology creates the battery technology. It’s part of a new venture: Waywayseecappo Energy Alliance.

Other members include Waywayseecappo First Nation and Ishkonigan Inc., a consulting company founded by former Assembly of First Nations national chief Phil Fontaine. (Fontaine is a member of Sagkeeng First Nation in Manitoba.)

Business

Warlock Lid puts province upfront, on top

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Preview

Warlock Lid puts province upfront, on top

Aaron Epp 4 minute read Monday, Jun. 29, 2026

Warlock Lid Co.’s success has been fuelled not by sorcery but by national pride.

The four-year-old company sells Canadian-themed apparel, including a provincial collection with unique designs for Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario. Headquartered in southwestern Manitoba, Warlock is on track to sell around 30,000 hats this year and a similar amount of hoodies, according to owner Brett Warbeck.

“We’ve almost doubled our production every year since we’ve started,” Warbeck said by phone from his shop on Broadway Avenue in Killarney. “People seem to love the hats and hoodies more than ever.”

The 37-year-old creates the designs and sources the clothing from Canadian suppliers. The leather patches and rubber pieces bearing the logos — also sourced in Canada — are applied at the shop.

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Monday, Jun. 29, 2026

Business

Carbon capture project gains support

Julia-Simone Rutgers 7 minute read Preview

Carbon capture project gains support

Julia-Simone Rutgers 7 minute read Monday, Jun. 29, 2026

A direct air carbon capture facility proposed for southwestern Manitoba has been shoring up allies in local and Indigenous governments and large corporations, as Montreal-based Deep Sky aims to convince the province its project is ready to launch.

The venture capital-backed tech firm sent the province a package of support letters late last year, encouraging the government to provide the regulatory support and electric power supply needed for the facility to move forward, according to documents obtained by the Free Press/The Narwhal.

“Deep Sky Manitoba is not a speculative concept,” the company wrote in a December letter. “It is a commercially viable infrastructure project that is backed by real market demand and presents an economic opportunity for Manitoba on a global scale.”

Deep Sky is proposing a 145-acre facility in the agriculture and oil-dominant southwestern region that will scrub 30,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere each year and inject it into porous rock formations 1,000 metres below ground. The company says it will use technology first tested at its existing accelerator in Innisfail, Alta., and will finance the $200-million Manitoba project by selling carbon credits.

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Monday, Jun. 29, 2026

Business

Berry farms brave storms, eye opening days

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Preview

Berry farms brave storms, eye opening days

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

Despite the unprecedented downpour, berry season is on in Manitoba.

Bright red strawberries have begun sprouting at Boonstra Farms — just two weeks after the Stonewall-area patch was hit by 11 inches of rain during a storm.

“Hopefully, it’ll still be an OK season,” said co-owner Danielle Boonstra. “We’re still hoping to open, probably after Canada Day.”

Torrential rain and cold temperatures have pushed strawberry picking season back to, likely, the first week of July. Haskap picking may start this weekend.

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Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

Opinion

Farmers just one link in long supply chain

Laura Rance-Unger 4 minute read Preview

Farmers just one link in long supply chain

Laura Rance-Unger 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

Farmers are hardly front and centre in newly released federal and provincial reports analyzing why food has become less affordable for many Canadians.

The word “farmers” doesn’t even appear in the Manitoba government’s Grocery Price Strategy report until Page 7.

That’s a good thing, because it signals a new level of awareness in how we collectively view the food system. The focus is shifting from front-line farmers to the largely invisible and complicated supply chain connecting field to table.

It might even change how farmers see themselves.

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Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

Opinion

Summer school for RESPs

Joel Schlesinger 6 minute read Preview

Summer school for RESPs

Joel Schlesinger 6 minute read Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

If you’ve been saving for years for your child’s post-secondary education, and they are now ready to pursue higher learning in the fall, it’s not unusual to feel a little lost regarding how best to use that money.

That’s because the main savings vehicle for post-secondary learning, the Registered Education Savings Plan (RESP), is often complicated to unwind.

“There are definitely some unique aspects to taking out money from a RESP,” says Anthony Maros, senior private banker at BMO Private Wealth in Winnipeg.

Unlike a RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan) where every withdrawal is taxable because all contributions are made with after tax money (hence the deduction on contributions), RESPs involve taxable and non-taxable withdrawals.

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Saturday, Jun. 27, 2026

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Business

Winnipeg-based Petline Insurance partners with Pet Valu

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 24, 2026

Care for a side of pet insurance with that dog toy?

Winnipeg-based Petline Insurance Co. has partnered with national retail chain Pet Valu to spread its services.

The ink is drying on the deal. Petline — which covers veterinary bill claims — is tapping into Pet Valu’s 2.8 million members and 824 stores. (Twenty-nine of those are located in Manitoba.)

It’s the first time Pet Valu has done a marketing collaboration “on this scale” with a pet insurance company, chief executive Greg Ramier wrote in a statement.

Business

Construction boom to take flight at 17 Wing

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Preview

Construction boom to take flight at 17 Wing

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 24, 2026

Upwards of $250 million in construction projects could be inbound as Winnipeg’s Royal Canadian Air Force base expands.

The Winnipeg Construction Association is tracking 33 projects at 17 Wing Winnipeg from now through 2033. Collectively, they could be worth $250 million to $450 million, said Darryl Harrison, the association’s president.

“This is historic levels of defence spending in construction.”

He expects half the projects to begin this year. One involves a training facility, potentially $50 million to $75 million in construction, as part of the Future Air Crew Training program — an initiative meant to replace current offerings at 17 Wing, Southport (west of Winnipeg) and Moose Jaw, Sask.

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Wednesday, Jun. 24, 2026

Business

Parlour Coffee closes, clearing way for Passage

Aaron Epp 5 minute read Preview

Parlour Coffee closes, clearing way for Passage

Aaron Epp 5 minute read Wednesday, Jun. 24, 2026

Two-and-a-half years after purchasing Parlour Coffee, Connor Vogt is closing the Exchange District business to make way for a new venture next door.

Parlour staff will pour their last drinks at 468 Main St., on Friday and then open Passage at the corner of Main Street and Bannatyne Avenue next month. The new coffee shop will feature a bigger space, longer hours and live events while retaining Parlour’s emphasis on being a gathering place, Vogt said.

“There are so many great coffee shops in our neighbourhood already doing their thing,” said Vogt, 31, naming Sho Coffee & Bar, Saintuary and Más Coffee Co., as examples. “We want to do something just a little bit different.”

While Parlour is between 400 and 500 square feet and can fit around 20 people, Passage will be more than double the size, with room for around 50 customers. Renovations are currently under way in the building, which is owned by Vogt’s father Ernie. (He also owns 468 Main St.)

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Wednesday, Jun. 24, 2026

Business

Saskatchewan mine books space on Hudson Bay Railway

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Tuesday, Jun. 23, 2026

A Saskatchewan mine deemed a project of national importance by Ottawa will ship its goods on the Hudson Bay Railway.

Eldorado Gold is sending nickel concentrate to Eastern Canada. To get there, it’s trucking the product to the Hudson Bay Railway’s Flin Flon stop.

The nickel concentrate is then railed to The Pas, where it’s transferred to the Canadian National Railway network.

“It’s all kicking off,” said Chris Avery, president of Hudson Bay Railway owner Arctic Gateway Group.

Business

Ottawa tabs $21.6M for Sayisi Dene energy projects

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Monday, Jun. 22, 2026

A remote northern Manitoba community has solar panels stocked — and now, it’s creating the province’s first integrated renewable energy microgrid led by a First Nation.

‘The water can’t get away’

Gabrielle Piché 6 minute read Preview

‘The water can’t get away’

Gabrielle Piché 6 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

Manitoba crop insurance payouts will likely exceed $15 million this year — before factoring in recent flooding in the Interlake and Parkland regions. Total costs won’t be fully known until year end.

Meantime, as dozens of local communities declare states of emergency, some farmers are calling for greater infrastructure investment, saying damage could’ve been avoided with better drainage maintenance.

“You can do as much ditching as you want in a field, but if it gets to municipality ditches or the provincial ditches and it can’t flow away, it just doesn’t help anything,” said Ryan Elliot.

He farms roughly 6,000 acres with his father near Stonewall. About one-third of their crop — wheat, canola — has been completely destroyed by rain, Elliot said. He estimates another third is “heavily damaged.”

Read
2:01 AM CDT

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