Is British farming facing an existential crisis?

Bogweevil

Member
I guess few will disagree with this?

Is British farming facing an existential crisis?​

By Kevin White7 May 2023 The Grocer

The UK’s self-sufficiency is ‘slipping’, with many growers reporting receiving minuscule returns. Does Rishi Sunak’s emergency summit signal the start of meaningful action to save British farming
Farming’s a tough gig these days. High costs, low returns, fraught relationships with buyers. It’s perhaps little wonder that, in a new survey out this week, the majority of farmers reported falling confidence in their businesses.
As NFU president Minette Batters put it in December, the very existence of British food production is now “under threat”.
And the problem is serious enough, it appears, that Rishi Sunak is finally paying attention, with the prime minister expected to host an emergency food security summit with food bosses on 16 May to look at the threats to British food supply alongside the UK’s stubbornly high inflation rates.
Sunak would be acting on expert guidance. Former MI5 director general Baroness Manningham-Buller recently warned that food security poses a worrying threat to the country’s national security, arguing that the issues facing producers must be urgently addressed if the country wanted to avoid being increasingly subject to global shocks in the future.
Sectors as diverse as pork, poultry and dairy, alongside fruit & veg and eggs, have all faced a host of financial and labour-based challenges over the past two years. And warnings the sector is facing an existential threat have continued to hold true into this year.

Supermarkets are still struggling to source sufficient numbers of eggs after they initially ignored calls from the sector to pay more. The past two months have also seen ongoing supply difficulties in fresh produce. Meanwhile, dairy farmers are now warning a rapid fall in farmgate pricing means many are yet again producing milk at a loss.
Apple growers have become the latest group to warn soaring retail prices are not being translated into increased returns, with The Grocer reporting last month that average prices paid to growers climbed by just 0.8% last year, according to data from British Apples & Pears. This is despite supermarket prices rising by as much as 46%.
Sunak’s conference marks a big step up in recognition from the government on the state of British farming. As recently as February, Defra secretary Thérèse Coffey was largely dismissing the concerns of the sector, stressing – to much derision – that the UK had a “highly resilient food supply chain and is well equipped to deal with situations that have the potential to cause disruption”.

The average price paid to apple growers last year rose by just 0.8%
However, despite Coffey’s proclamations, the crises of the past few years, exacerbated by the war in Ukraine, have “really highlighted the fragility of our food system”, says Vicki Hird, head of sustainable farming at food and farming charity Sustain. “It’s now an extremely broken system in the way farmers get so little, take so many risks, and can’t reap the rewards.”
But while the farmers warn the long-term future of the sector is on a knife edge thanks to current practices, Batters does admit that the UK’s self-sufficiency (so far, at least) has remained pretty static at around 60% for the past two decades.
In fact, in many sectors, self-sufficiency has actually increased over the past 50 years (see chart), according to analysis of Defra data by farming consultancy Andersons, which puts total food and drink self-sufficiency at 61% – and 74% for indigenous food products.
This comes despite a 10% reduction in the amount of farmed land between 1973 and 2021, Andersons said in its report published last December. The chief driver behind this growth can be explained by increased efficiency and consolidation, suggests Batters. A mixed blessing, in many ways.

Efficiency has boomed thanks to new technologies and machinery. But this is typically of most help to big farms wanting to get bigger. Such consolidation has led to a serious decline in the number of farming businesses left in the UK – down by 41% since 1973 while the number of full-time farmers has fallen 33%.
While it is a common complaint that farmers have failed to see any prices rises for their goods at all in recent times, that’s not strictly true. The money paid to farming businesses on an annual basis has seen strong growth in recent years, rising by 14.4% (or £756m) from 2020 to 2021 to the third-highest level, in real terms, since 2000 (see table below), according to Defra’s Total Income from Farming (TIFF) metric.
The problem is that it’s not enough. Farmers are seeing huge cost rises on inputs – from fertiliser, feed, and energy – thanks to the war in Ukraine.
“The gap between the cost of production and the value of sales is still too wide and too variable to be sustainable”
David Horton-Fawkes, CEO at AF
Data published last autumn by farm supplies co-operative AF showed an eye-watering 34.2% increase in the average cost of farming inputs between September 2021 and 2022. Farmers were burdened with the biggest jumps on animal feed and medicine, fuel and fertiliser which saw annual year-on-year jumps of 36%, 43% and 134% respectively.
An exodus of seasonal workers has also placed a huge strain on labour markets and added numerous new costs to farmers’ balance sheets. “About £70m worth of crops went to waste last year [due to labour shortages],” Batters says.
These sometimes triple-figure inflation rates compared with an average RPI rate of 14.3% for the period. The difference led AF to warn of the huge disparity between food price inflation and aginflation, with many food producers still facing crippling costs.
Indeed its Aginflation Index score – which combines all its key input prices into one metric – hit 288 points last week, 63% higher than its RPI index score of 177, reflecting the serious gap in retail and farm input inflation.

Inflation remains particularly apparent in crop protection products and feeds containing soya – with AF noting the price of compound blended feeds used across the livestock sector had not fallen as far as markets had suggested, despite the fall in cereal commodity prices. The good news is that inflation on many agricultural inputs is now easing, albeit slightly. In the six months to the end of March, AF’s Index showed an average fall of 2.6% in the cost of inputs.
But while the dip in aginflation is “very good news”, according to AF CEO David Horton-Fawkes, “the gap between the cost of production and the value of sales is still too wide and too variable to be sustainable”, he suggests. A report, titled Unpicking Food Prices, published by Sustain in December, showed many farmers – after intermediaries and retailers took their cut – often received far less than 1% of the profit for the food they produced.
For a loaf of bread, for example, a cereal farmer may spend 9p producing the ingredients for the product. Yet they received an almost negligible profit (0.09p) on the average selling price of £1.14 in the supermarkets, the report revealed, with the report finding many more such examples across the sector.
Even where farmers do receive more money for their product, supermarkets and processors are often the main beneficiaries.
Take dairy. The category saw record farmgate milk prices in 2022, driving record retail price inflation for staples such as four pints of milk, which hit £1.70 in Waitrose in January, up 36% year on year.

Milk prices soared in 2022 – but the mults benefited more than dairy farmers, and prices are coming down faster than input costs
But by combining Defra’s average farmgate with ONS data on the average price of milk, the mults look to have benefited from a far higher uplift than the farmers supplying them.
These types of discrepancies lay bare the inequalities in the supply chain, suggests Hird at Sustain. “It has become so efficient that nobody is making anything any more.”
Rabobank UK CEO Will Jennings echoes her sentiment. While he argues the food sector is “not broken” nor “on the verge of collapse”, he agrees that the focus on shareholder value and efficiency has pushed some parts of the food chain “into over-efficiency, where it has become too good in what it does”. Chiefly, he says, this refers to the retailers who have sought to extract as much value from the supply chain as possible. But he is also keen to stress “we have to be very careful not to point the finger of blame and say one part of the food sector is more broken than the other”.
Others, however, aren’t quite so reticent. Lisa Jack, a professor of accounting at the University of Portsmouth – who co-authored Sustain’s Unpicking Food Prices report – points out that many food producers have been receiving the same low profits for over a century, mirroring the steady returns that supermarkets have coming in.

Jack argues this shows how “the model of supermarkets making a net margin of around 1%-2% is hard-wired in”, adding the lack of transparency over pricing is also a historical position of which there seems to be little appetite to change.
It’s a common theme across the board, says Ged Futter, director of consultancy The Retail Mind, who while discussing the plight of apple growers last week, told The Grocer the appetite to work collaboratively to understand the supply chain and the costs involved was “non-existent for the vast majority of retailers”.
He adds: “Growers will walk away from contracts because they can’t afford to keep supplying. So then the relationship the retailers have is to go back to a transactional relationship. That means any investment that’s needed by British growers into technology, into farming methods, just won’t happen.”
The NFU farmer confidence survey, published this week, found 88% of respondents felt the price of input costs would have a negative effect on their businesses.
“Growers will walk away from contracts because they can’t afford to keep supplying”
Ged Futter, director of consultancy at The Retail Mind
Some 82% of the 613 NFU farmer and grower members were concerned with the phasing out of the Basic Payment Scheme farm subsidy regime, while 55% were concerned with the introduction of new government support, including its controversial Environmental Land Management schemes.
Other drivers of dismay are an increasingly confrontational relationship with supermarkets, says the NFU’s Batters. And “the fear of speaking out is rife”, when it comes to pushing for improved returns.
“They are incredibly worried about being delisted, and this has not been helped by recent issues such as what Tesco did with those fulfilment charges,” she adds – pointing to the retailer’s controversial threat to review ranges unless suppliers and producers paid a new fee for online and Booker wholesale operations.

The three-year outlook for confidence on farmers is no better, down seven percentage points since the same time last year.
As the table below shows, pretty much every farming sector is feeling suitably pessimistic about what the future holds. “We are definitely seeing more people leave the industry, and the mood with growers in particular is really gloomy,” Batters says. “They are at their wit’s end… it is clear uncertainty is driving this contraction.”
Batters wants a “grown-up conversation” across the entire food sector “about what fair trade is actually going to look like, so that we can shore up the quality and quantity of supply”.
Citing the plight of the egg sector over the past year – whose crisis led to has led to almost a billion fewer eggs on the market – she warns more shortages will follow unless wholesale change occurs.
In addition to more government engagement and even legislation to improve fairness and transparency in supply chains when it comes to this issue (plus a beefed up Groceries Code Adjudicator), Batters falls back on her old call to introduce an official target that would commit the UK to hitting a certain level of self-sufficiency. So far at least, they are calls that have fallen on deaf ears. But the record suggests this isn’t one the market will sort out for itself. Does the government have the desire to intervene? We’re about to find out.
 

yin ewe

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Co Antrim
I don't really get all the talk of doom and gloom tbh, if it's profitable to produce food then produce food, if it's more profitable to plant trees or farm carbon or whatever the next big thing is then do that.
It's not my responsibility to feed the nation it's my responsibility to run a profitable business that will allow me to feed my family.
Besides that they'll be giving us a grant in 20 years time to rip out the trees they've given us a grant to plant as imported food has got too expensive.
 

7610 super q

Never Forgotten
Honorary Member
Yeah, been thinking something similar the last few months. The entire country whining about high food prices, single handedly getting the blame for inflation, yet farm gate prices for eggs, potatoes, veg, and grain barely viable.

Should have upped prices an icle bit every year for the last 4 decades, instead of paying dole to keep prices artificially low. Now the dole payment rate is 25 years behind too, with the possibility of it disappearing altogether.
 

Jackov Altraids

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Devon
Yes it is.
So many factors and vested interests that have combined to threaten UK ag. as we know it.
Fundamentally it is all about the desires to use land for anything/ everything but farming.

More building, forests, renewables, nature reserves, etc.
There isn't enough land for everything the government has committed to, as it it.
 

som farmer

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
somerset
its quite simple, successive guv's for 50/60 years have kept the price of home produced food artificially low, through various types of subs or schemes.

bearing in mind, the vast majority of present politicians, have never known a time, when food was anything other than cheap and plentiful.

the major retailers will just say, we can still get enough food, profits are great, no problem. They are currently hammering milk, but still get enough, as they always have done, just manipulate price to suit.

Thinking logically, there's a problem. When do politicians think logically ?

s/mkts say no problem
policy is for cheap food
foreign trade deals are based by selling services, and have ag product back in exchange
manufacturing is more important than ag
environmentalists are more important than us, more votes for a start, a lot more.

lets not kid ourselves, nothing is going to change much, until the sh!t well and truly hits the fan.

we are rapidly simplifying our system, milk from forage, home grown cereals etc, aiming dog and stick.
 
Last edited:

DrWazzock

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lincolnshire
Just a few very expensive organic or specialty fancy breed eggs in Tescos Market Rasen last week. And it’s been like that for months. I hope the folk producing those eggs are seeing the benefit but I doubt they are seeing as much benefit as Tesco.
I actually woke up this morning contemplating stopping farming as I do quite often.
Why live a financially impoverished life when we could sell up and even a low rate bond would pay a better income?
For us here we were essentially finished when neonic seed coatings were banned or restricted to useless levels on OSR and beet. People laugh this off with blase optimism and denial but it was the defining moment of the reversal of arable farming progress in the U.K. We limp on but we face competition from cheap imports who still use these products and aren’t subject to many other government or even self imposed regulations and costs. With combinables prices now slumping back to prewar levels but produced with inputs bought at war time levels this year has seen us work for absolutely nothing. I am warned that my insurance bill for example will rise 25% this year to due to inflation of materials costs. And those kind of charges never fall again.
This kind of operating environment : high cost, low return, high regulation, continual withdrawal of actives available to our competitors is plainly and simply unsustainable.
If nothing changes we won’t be farming in two years time. We will simply run out of cash. It won’t be a choice. It just won’t be possible to continue farming for cashflow reasons.
There’s plenty of other things we can do though, so I’m not going to get despondent about it. We still have an asset we can sell or more likely use for other things. So this isn’t a “poor me” whinge, ( we are actually very fortunate), it’s just a frank and realistic assessment of farming prospects.
 

DrWazzock

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lincolnshire
You won’t be alone in your thinking @DrWazzock and that worries me greatly.

Unlike you, I have very few options. And again, this isn’t a “poor me” whinge either, just fact. I expect there will be enough for me to do , but for my lad and the cracking local chap who does a lot for me? I doubt it.
I expect this job here will see me out but for the next generation I hope they do something better. Not sure I’d wish it on them. And if they are handy and willing they will always find something useful to do that’s for sure.
Meantimes we will crack on and have a laugh where we can.👍
 

DrWazzock

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lincolnshire
And as I have said it’s not even really about optimism, pessimism, the right attitude or anything abstract like that.
It’s about simple mathematics. If prices stay as they are for harvest 23 it doesn’t take a genius to see that they won’t cover outgoings into next year. And we will have to stop farming and do something else. The fall in the price of some inputs will help us a bit but it’s the one way rise of overheads, spare parts etc that’s killing us, and of course the cost of living.
I gave up being sad about that a long time ago. It just is what it is. I’ll always find plenty to do.👍
 
I’m in a different position to you because I can set my price rather than take what’s offered. I don’t raise my prices without serious consideration for my customers, that’s for sure.

But the fact is, I need tonnes and lots of them. And if you chaps are cutting back then my tonnage starts to slide and then I’ve got expensive, depreciating kit stood about with nothing to do.

And I doubt wild flowers or trees will need much lime.
 

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
I don't really get all the talk of doom and gloom tbh, if it's profitable to produce food then produce food, if it's more profitable to plant trees or farm carbon or whatever the next big thing is then do that.
It's not my responsibility to feed the nation it's my responsibility to run a profitable business that will allow me to feed my family.
Besides that they'll be giving us a grant in 20 years time to rip out the trees they've given us a grant to plant as imported food has got too expensive.

^^^ this

too many (nfu) brainwashed farmers (see twitter) convinced their duty to feed people offers demigod status and immortality 🤣

Do what ever makes YOU money to feed YOUR family - growing trees / park keeping etc is probably a lot easier, less risky and stressful as well !

let them eat cake !
 

glasshouse

Member
Location
lothians
DF4C88BE-94FE-4062-86AE-EF0B4E25DC26.png
And this is what the papers say.
Strangely i am blocked from commenting.
They havent a clue.
No mention of massive rent rises and house price inflation
 

DrWazzock

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lincolnshire
I’m in a different position to you because I can set my price rather than take what’s offered. I don’t raise my prices without serious consideration for my customers, that’s for sure.

But the fact is, I need tonnes and lots of them. And if you chaps are cutting back then my tonnage starts to slide and then I’ve got expensive, depreciating kit stood about with nothing to do.

And I doubt wild flowers or trees will need much lime.
I wouldn’t worry. There will always be ag production here in the U.K. but my take on it is that it will shrink back to the more productive land. The grade three hare, that’s always been a struggle will find other uses.
 
^^^ this

too many (nfu) brainwashed farmers (see twitter) convinced their duty to feed people offers demigod status and immortality 🤣

Do what ever makes YOU money to feed YOUR family - growing trees / park keeping etc is probably a lot easier, less risky and stressful as well !

let them eat cake !
From what I gather simply saying ok I’ll plant trees now show me the money , I know two land owners who gloated how much money they will make yet I still see no trees
 
I wouldn’t worry. There will always be ag production here in the U.K. but my take on it is that it will shrink back to the more productive land. The grade three hare, that’s always been a struggle will find other uses.

There is a lot of grade 3 and maginal land around here, which has of course kept us busy in the past. But I am concerned about it’s future use.

Within 10 miles of here at least three big estates are seeing a lot of changes. Tenants have been put on short term agreements and many have become contract farmers. Easy to push out.

I heard that one large estate that has committed to rewilding a big area has to fill in ditches and block up land drains. That will render the land wet and useless for farming, which is ok if you’re the one getting the payments. But those actions will have a knock on effect to their neighbours too.
 

SFI - What % were you taking out of production?

  • 0 %

    Votes: 105 40.5%
  • Up to 25%

    Votes: 94 36.3%
  • 25-50%

    Votes: 39 15.1%
  • 50-75%

    Votes: 5 1.9%
  • 75-100%

    Votes: 3 1.2%
  • 100% I’ve had enough of farming!

    Votes: 13 5.0%

May Event: The most profitable farm diversification strategy 2024 - Mobile Data Centres

  • 1,799
  • 32
With just a internet connection and a plug socket you too can join over 70 farms currently earning up to £1.27 ppkw ~ 201% ROI

Register Here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-mo...2024-mobile-data-centres-tickets-871045770347

Tuesday, May 21 · 10am - 2pm GMT+1

Location: Village Hotel Bury, Rochdale Road, Bury, BL9 7BQ

The Farming Forum has teamed up with the award winning hardware manufacturer Easy Compute to bring you an educational talk about how AI and blockchain technology is helping farmers to diversify their land.

Over the past 7 years, Easy Compute have been working with farmers, agricultural businesses, and renewable energy farms all across the UK to help turn leftover space into mini data centres. With...
Top