Across the country more than 3,500 grants worth £23.5
million have been allocated from the Countryside
Productivity Small Grants scheme (CPSG).
The scheme will help farmers to purchase the equipment
they need to make their businesses more productive,
with grants available to aid electronic identification
of livestock, improve the application of manures, and
introduce guidance systems to aid precision farming.
Farming Minister , who is
attending the Royal Cornwall Show today (8 June) said:
It is fantastic to see this scheme has proven so
popular, with a collective number of grants now worth
£23.5 million, and nearly a third of this funding
going towards farms and businesses across the South
West.
The equipment on the market today can revolutionise
farms, saving time and increasing yields. This
funding will enable farmers, regardless of the size
of their business, to access some of the best kit
available.
Projects which fall under the CPSG scheme include state
of the art equipment such as the Shallow Injections
System which can inject slurry directly into the soil
surface thereby reducing ammonia emissions, increasing
the uptake of nitrogen in plants and enhancing silage
quality.
The scheme, which closed for applications on 14 March,
initially allocated £15 million to contribute to the
cost of farm equipment to boost productivity on farms.
However due to the high number of quality applications
Defra has increased the funding to £23.5 million. Farms
and businesses in Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Somerset,
Wiltshire and Gloucestershire are set to receive almost
one third of the total allocation.
There is equipment specific to cattle, sheep and pig
farmers, as well as precision farming and resource
management and efficiency equipment designed to make
the lives of arable and livestock farmers easier.
The Small Grant scheme is one element within the £200
million package of RDPE funding announced last summer,
which aims to boost growth and create jobs in the rural
economy.
For more detail on how to apply for the scheme please
see here.