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Government announces new fairer allocation of farm
funding across the UK
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Farm budget topped up with over £56 million until
2022
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Announcement comes as Government pledges additional
£160m cash boost for Scottish farmers
A multi-million pound cash boost for farmers and a fairer
approach to funding across all four corners of the UK has been
announced by the UK Government today.
Following the recommendations of an independent review led by
, the Government will allocate
£56.59 million of new funding for farmers until 2022 and create a
more tailored funding formula under the Government’s funding
commitment for this Parliament.
Lord Bew’s review,
announced last
year, looked at what factors should determine the
distribution of so-called ‘convergence’ funding – additional
Common Agricultural Policy funding allocated to the UK between
2014 and 2020 to make payment rates more equal between EU Member
States – to farmers over the next two years.
The Prime Minister confirmed this would mean a £51.4m boost for
Scottish farmers during a visit to a farm in Aberdeenshire. This
follows the announcement in Wednesday’s Spending Round for a one
off payment of £160 million for Scottish farmers, drawing a
line under previous concerns with the methodologies and decisions
related to convergence.
Environment Secretary said:
“I welcome the recommendations from and his panel on allocation
of funding between England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
over the next two years.
“I am very pleased that we have not only been able to accommodate
their recommendations for funding, but have been able to go
further and provide Scottish farmers with the funding they feel
they should have received between 2014 and 2020.
“We will always back our great farmers and ensure Brexit works
for all four corners of the UK. This new system will allow us to
draw a line under decisions of the past and move towards a new
model for farm support as we look ahead to our future outside the
EU.”
The new formula to distribute funding across the UK will reward
land that previously received less CAP funding per hectare than
the EU average. This means the support of the Pillar 1 budget
will be tilted slightly towards those who farm in challenging
environments, such as upland areas.
Lord Bew’s recommendations aim to address the concerns of
Scottish farmers and either maintain or increase funding for
farmers in other parts of the UK for the 2020 and 2021 scheme
years. This includes:
- Agriculture funding for 2020-22 should be maintained in
England and Northern Ireland and increased in Wales and Scotland.
This means an overall funding uplift of £56.59 million will be
new money allocated by the Treasury.
- Convergence funding for 2020-22 should be divided according
to land across the UK that previously received less CAP funding
per hectare than the EU average.
- The ‘per-hectare’ approach is not suitable for future farm
support budgets.
- That the budget should reflect the challenges facing farms
operating in difficult environments, such as our upland areas.
- Administrations across the UK engage collectively to agree
principles for allocation of agriculture funding after
2022.
- Governments in all parts of the UK recognise the critical
value of farming by protecting, if not enhancing, future
agriculture funding – particularly in the context of EU Exit
uncertainty.
The panel proposes the following allocations of this funding from
2020 to 2022, but with implied reductions offset with additional
funding.
- England – 13.9 per cent
- Scotland – 63.7 per cent
- Wales – 13.7 per cent
- Northern Ireland – 8.7 per cent
In reaching these recommendations, the panel consulted with
farming stakeholders, political parties and economists across the
UK, as well as Ministers from the Scottish and Welsh Governments
and senior officials from Northern Ireland’s Department of
Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA).
ENDS
Notes to editors
-
was Chair of the Committee
on Standards in Public Life for five years and has contributed
to a number of Bills, reviews and reports since his appointment
as a non-party-political peer by the independent House of Lords
Appointments Commission in February 2007.
- The panel was made up of representatives from each part of
the UK – , Jim Walker,
Rebecca Williams and Leo O’Reilly represented England,
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland respectively.
- Convergence funding was introduced by the European Union to
redistribute CAP payments fairly between Member States. Those
Member States who receive less than 90% of the EU average receive
a funding uplift.