In a seed industry defined by rapid change and increasingly complex trade pathways, 2025 underscored one truth: seed quality depends on scientific consistency across borders.
For us, 2025 was about strengthening consistency, harmonizing testing across North America, accelerating diagnostics for growers, advancing international standards, and supporting a global community built on trust.
In a recent article for Seed World Canada, Holly Gelech (Senior Business Development Manager) delved into this. Read on to learn more about our contributions to the crop science industry in 2025.
Seed quality testing today happens in a world where borders matter, but consistency matters more. With seed moving freely between Canada and the United States, customers no longer think in terms of separate markets, they think about production, movement, and performance across an integrated supply chain.
Our North American laboratories function as one unified system, ensuring identical service regardless of where a sample lands. Whether tests follow CFIA rules, AOSA guidance, or ISTA standards, our analysts work from harmonized criteria validated through real-time comparison. A germination tray in Brookings, South Dakota, can be evaluated simultaneously with the same lot in Sherwood Park or Grande Prairie, thousands of kilometers apart, yet side-by-side for interpretation.
This alignment proved crucial during challenging logistics this year, when both physical seed shipments and sample transfers were affected by adverse conditions. By operating as an integrated network, we removed obstacles rather than adding to them, especially for forage, grass seed, and cover crop clients navigating peak export seasons.
A recent example illustrates the value: a customer required the exact same vigor method applied to treated seed on both sides of the border. Our teams exchanged methodologies, ran comparison tests, evaluated seedlings collaboratively by video, and conducted a full validation study. The result was complete confidence in cross-border consistency — a reminder that even as AI tools emerge, the expertise of trained seed analysts remains irreplaceable.
This year also showcased the power of our contributions to the International Seed Testing Association (ISTA). We were represented on nearly half of ISTA’s technical committees, enabling us to help shape global testing rules and ensure new methods arrive in all our labs simultaneously.
A highlight for us, member of the organizing committee, was securing the bid to host the 2026 ISTA Annual General Meeting in Calgary. It will be the country’s first ISTA meeting in 43 years. The event will spotlight Canada’s leadership in seed science and help inspire the next generation of seed analysts at a time when attracting new talent is critical for our industry.
One of the year’s most groundbreaking global efforts came from our Canadian Fusarium diagnostics team, led by Nicole Calliou. Working through ISTA, she helped build the world’s first open-access, image-based Fusarium identification database, a resource documenting every variable that affects colony appearance, from agar type to lighting to growth duration. For labs around the world, especially those in developing regions, this tool brings new clarity and consistency to one of the most challenging pathogen identifications in seed testing.
2025 also marked major advances in molecular and genomic diagnostics, giving growers faster and more precise insights than ever before.
Across our North American network (Sherwood Park, Grande Prairie, and Brookings), regional expertise is backed by global standards. Sherwood Park’s expanded chemistry and disease capabilities, Grande Prairie’s strength in fescue and vegetable testing, and Brookings’ deep experience in corn, soybeans, and trait confirmation all contribute to a robust system that supports seed companies from early-stage breeding to international export.
Cold stress tests, vigour evaluations, thousand kernel weight analysis, ISTA Orange International Certificates, APHIS documentation, and molecular assays all converge to help clients make informed, confident decisions. The 2025 seed crop test results highlighted the value of that insight, with extreme variability in germination and kernel weight making accredited, harmonized testing more essential than ever.
To learn more about seed testing capabilities, visit our website: sgs.com/cropscience.
SGS is the world’s leading Testing, Inspection and Certification company. We operate a network of over 2,500 laboratories and business facilities across 115 countries, supported by a team of 99,500 dedicated professionals. With over 145 years of service excellence, we combine the precision and accuracy that define Swiss companies to help organizations achieve the highest standards of quality, compliance and sustainability.
Our brand promise – when you need to be sure – underscores our commitment to trust, integrity and reliability, enabling businesses to thrive with confidence. We proudly deliver our expert services through the SGS name and trusted specialized brands, including Brightsight, Bluesign, Maine Pointe and Nutrasource.
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