Eustice unveils tiered ‘public goods’ system for future UK farm subsidies

agrilanduk.JPG


Written by Rachel Martin

Environment Secretary George Eustice has today (Tuesday, February 25) called on farmers and land managers to share their views on the Government’s flagship green farming scheme outside the EU.

Speaking ahead of his session at the National Farmers’ Union’s annual conference this week, the Environment Secretary announced that farmers will be at the forefront of reversing environmental declines and tackling climate change as they reshape the future of farming in the 21st century.

A tiered system


It comes as the Government today publishes new details on its future Environmental Land Management Scheme (ELM), which will see farmers paid for work that enhances the environment.

Moving away from a system that pays farmers for the total amount of land farmed, the scheme will instead pay for ‘public goods’ that benefit society, such as clean air and water.


Work supported includes:

  • Tree or hedge planting;
  • River management to mitigate flooding; or
  • Creating or restoring habitats for wildlife.


Environment Secretary George Eustice said: “We can all agree that we want British farming to be sustainable in the truest sense of the word, an industry which is profitable, competitive, and productive while feeding the nation and taking care of our landscapes too.

“This week we’ve published more detail on our plans for the future and specifically on Environment Land Management, outlining how we hope to work with our farmers, and what to expect.

“Now more than ever, efforts for the environment are absolutely critical, and no group has more power to reverse environmental decline than our farmers.

The new proposals unveiled today will include three ‘tiers’ of entry to the scheme, enabling anyone from any farm or land type to participate at the right level.

Tier one would encourage farmers to adopt environmentally sustainable farming and forestry practices, while farmers, foresters and other land managers in tier two would focus on delivering locally-targeted environmental outcomes.

The third tier would pay for larger-scale, transformational projects – such as restoring peatland.

Farmers and land managers will have 10 weeks to have their say on the details of the new scheme, with government capturing their knowledge and experience to ensure it does not repeat the mistakes of the EU’s burdensome Common Agricultural Policy (CAP).

This will be supported with a number of regional events across the country for knowledge sharing between farmers, land managers and foresters and Defra officials designing the scheme.

Future farming policy update


The Government has today also published a future farming policy update, as the Agriculture Bill goes through the Committee Stage in the House of Commons.

This sets out how future policies will be designed to ensure increased productivity goes hand in hand with environmental initiatives, with further detail on issues including:

Productivity


From 2021, new Government grants will help farmers to invest in equipment and technology, which will help them to increase their productivity and deliver environmental benefits.

Research and Development


From 2022, Defra will support research and development projects to help our farming industry benefit from innovation, enabling farmers to produce food more efficiently and sustainably with lower emissions.

Animal Health and Welfare


A new deal will be struck between Government and farmers to promote the production of healthier, higher welfare animals.

Publicly-funded schemes will be made available for farmers to deliver animal health and welfare enhancements which go beyond regulatory requirements and which are valued by the public but not sufficiently provided for by the market.

Share your views


The Environmental Land Management Scheme discussion document will be open for views on Citizen Space, and the future farming policy update can be read in full on GOV.UK.

The post Eustice unveils tiered ‘public goods’ system for future UK farm subsidies appeared first on Agriland.co.uk.

Continue reading on the Agriland Website...
 

Steevo

Member
Location
Gloucestershire
I asked that at OFC and was assured there would be less red tape and measuring with ELMs. Here's hoping.

It sounds like there will be less farming for sure.

Without a profitable farming enterprise to run, there will be no farmers to carry out this environmental work.

Attention to detail and efficiency required today is so high on a farm that incorporating government designed environmental schemes to work around/alongside is a difficult task indeed. There just isn’t the slack in the system as I see it to do this.
 

Chris F

Staff
Moderator
Location
Hammerwich
It sounds like there will be less farming for sure.

Without a profitable farming enterprise to run, there will be no farmers to carry out this environmental work.

Attention to detail and efficiency required today is so high on a farm that incorporating government designed environmental schemes to work around/alongside is a difficult task indeed. There just isn’t the slack in the system as I see it to do this.

While you say that, and I understand why, we are also being told that we are 10% short on land to feed the planet. And that includes models of changing eating habits.

So farming needs to grow in terms of calories produced and in terms of land mass. I will agree this is at odds with all the re-wilding we are hearing and the fact ELMS will make certain parcels of land more profitable to not be farmed, than farmed.
 

Steevo

Member
Location
Gloucestershire
While you say that, and I understand why, we are also being told that we are 10% short on land to feed the planet. And that includes models of changing eating habits.

So farming needs to grow in terms of calories produced and in terms of land mass. I will agree this is at odds with all the re-wilding we are hearing and the fact ELMS will make certain parcels of land more profitable to not be farmed, than farmed.

The shortage and growth you mention relates to GLOBAL.

All the re-wilding/ELMS etc. will be a UK thing, and we'll still import the food we need whilst exporting the "dirty" industry abroad.
 

Chris F

Staff
Moderator
Location
Hammerwich
The shortage and growth you mention relates to GLOBAL.

All the re-wilding/ELMS etc. will be a UK thing, and we'll still import the food we need whilst exporting the "dirty" industry abroad.

That does worrying look like the model. We are further short than 10% right now in the UK. But farms are businesses and if for the next 10 years, farms are better off to plant some, wildflower strips, intercrop and so on, then just do it.
 

Bury the Trash

Member
Mixed Farmer
That does worrying look like the model. We are further short than 10% right now in the UK. But farms are businesses and if for the next 10 years, farms are better off to plant some, wildflower strips, intercrop and so on, then just do it.
Or set up home supply chains farm to fork, all controlled by farmer to customer.

Farm shops every where (y)

All done and quality assured by it's own people no hangers on .
 

Will you help clear snow?

  • yes

    Votes: 70 32.0%
  • no

    Votes: 149 68.0%

The London Palladium event “BPR Seminar”

  • 14,811
  • 234
This is our next step following the London rally 🚜

BPR is not just a farming issue, it affects ALL business, it removes incentive to invest for growth

Join us @LondonPalladium on the 16th for beginning of UK business fight back👍

Back
Top