| 24/06/2008
Euroview
Common Agricultural Policy needs emergency surgery
The European Commission has finally unveiled its long awaited
"Health Check" of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP).
The Health Check is the first overhaul of the CAP since the introduction
of the Single Farm Payment scheme in 2003/4 and assumes even more
importance following the spiralling of food prices around the world.
It seeks to update and simplify the scheme, adapting the CAP to
new challenges like food security and making it more relevant to
the modern world by moving more money away from direct subsidies
and into areas such as environmental stewardship.
The good news: set-aside has been abolished; the further reduction
in decoupling has been further reduced, and the abolition of
milk quotas is now planned.
But in the current climate of rocketing food prices I had hoped
that the European Commissioner would use the Health Check as
an opportunity to free up European Agriculture and to allow British
farmers to produce more food.
Firmer proposals on the simplification of cross compliance
regulations are also needed, and a greater amount of money moved
from direct payments into environmental schemes through compulsory
'modulation'.
We need to move more money moved from direct payments into
environmental schemes and there is a strong case for moving
support from cereal production into sectors that really
need support to survive, such as the livestock sector
which often farms in areas of high landscape value. The abolition
of set aside will allow us to produce more cereals and we can
retain its environmental benefits, such as enhanced hedgerows,
through six metre protection zones.
The market price now provides a huge incentive for farmers but
European red tape is getting in their way. Far from protecting farmers,
overzealous regulations are limiting their capacity to meet
the challenge of producing more food. We have a responsibility to
farmers in the EU and consumers across the globe to stop government
interference and allow them to do what they do best- produce food.
We need a far more wide scale reform of the CAP to bring it
up to date with the trials we face in the 21st century. The challenges
facing farming today are as numerous as the opportunities and we
need a CAP that will embrace the opportunities and minimise the
threats.
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