British Columbia beekeeping revenues and costs: survey data and profit modeling

Author:

Bixby Miriam1ORCID,Cunningham Morgan23,Foster Leonard1ORCID,Higo Heather4,Morfin Nuria15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of British Columbia , 2125 East Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4 , Canada

2. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Beaverlodge Research Farm , P.O. Box 29, Beaverlodge, AB T0H 0C0 , Canada

3. Department of Biology, University of Victoria , Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2 , Canada

4. The BC Honey Producers’ Association , P.O. Box 5609, Station B, Victoria, BC V8R 6S4 , Canada

5. British Columbia Technology Transfer Program, The BC Honey Producers’ Association , P.O. Box 5609, Station B, Victoria, BC V8R 6S4 , Canada

Abstract

Abstract British Columbia beekeepers, like many beekeepers around the world, are currently facing declines in honey bee health and high overwinter colony losses. To better understand the economics and the cycle of yearly colony loss and replacement of this critical agricultural industry, we collected and analyzed survey data on beekeeping costs and returns. Forty British Columbia beekeepers provided details about revenue sources, variable costs, capital costs, and investments. Ten surveyed beekeepers managed between 1 and 9 colonies, 10 managed between 10 and 39 colonies, 9 managed between 40 and 100 colonies, 5 managed between 101 and 299 colonies, 3 managed between 300 and 699 colonies, and 3 managed 700 colonies or more. The data was used to calculate beekeeping profit and to parameterize a model that explores the economic impact of colony loss rates and replacement strategies. Survey results show that when the data is aggregated, revenues exceed costs for beekeeping operations in British Columbia with a per colony profit of $56.92 or $0.87 per pound of honey produced. Surveyed operations with fewer than 100 colonies have negative profits, while operations with 100–299 colonies have positive profits. Surveyed operations in the Cariboo, North Coast, and Okanagan regions have the highest profits while surveyed operations in the Peace region have the lowest profits. Profit modeling shows that replacing losses with packages generates lower profit than replacing losses with split colonies. Our modeling shows that operations that diversify their revenue to include bee sales and commercial pollination accrue higher profits and can withstand higher winter loss rates.

Funder

Province of British Columbia

Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Insect Science,General Medicine

Reference31 articles.

1. Honey bee queen production: Canadian costing case study and profitability analysis;Bixby,2020

2. Impacts of COVID-19 on Canadian beekeeping: survey results and a profitability analysis;Bixby,2021

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