The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Dr
Thérèse Coffey) I would like to update the House on the next steps
that the Government are taking to help nature recover through our
new environmental improvement plan. It is a delivery plan setting
out how we will achieve our ambitious, stretching environmental
targets, the most critical of which is to halt the decline of
nature by the end of this decade. We can and must achieve that,
both here in the UK and...Request free
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The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(Dr Thérèse Coffey)
I would like to update the House on the next steps that the
Government are taking to help nature recover through our new
environmental improvement plan. It is a delivery plan setting out
how we will achieve our ambitious, stretching environmental
targets, the most critical of which is to halt the decline of
nature by the end of this decade. We can and must achieve that,
both here in the UK and globally.
We are already under way. In this Government’s first 100 days, we
have already delivered with legally binding targets to halt
nature’s decline, clean up our air and rivers and support a
circular economy; playing an instrumental role in a new global
agreement for nature at the UN nature summit COP15; enacting the
legal duty on Government, national and local, on considering
biodiversity; publishing our environment principles policy
statement; setting out in detail our transformational farming
schemes with the full range of actions we will pay farmers and
land managers to do to restore nature; announcing we will ban the
most commonly littered single-use plastic items from October
2023; agreeing to enact mandatory sustainable urban drainage
systems for new development, which will reduce the risk of
surface water flooding and pollution; putting in place the plant
biosecurity strategy for Great Britain, a five-year vision for
plant health to protect native species, with plants providing an
annual value of £15.7 billion to the UK; and agreeing with the
devolved Administrations our approach to managing fisheries.
There is much more I could add.
Nature is a crucial part of our islands’ story and our shared
future. We know what is special with our rare habitats and our
iconic species, and we also know the pressures it is under. We
rely on our natural capital for a secure supply of food, for
clean air, and for clean water, as well as for leisure and
genuine joy. However, nature has been taken for granted for too
long and used freely as a resource with little thought for the
consequences. We have to reverse that and respect nature.
Seventy years ago, people were waking up to the devastation of
the great flood of 1953, in which more than 300 people died,
reminding us that the full force of nature can bring us
challenges. We took action then and it is why we have continued
to invest billions of pounds in protecting people’s homes and in
better protecting more than 100,000 local businesses to safeguard
around 100,000 jobs. However, nature can also help us to tackle
some of our great challenges, so we need to help protect nature
too. Undoubtedly and understandably, the pandemic set us back in
some areas, as we responded to the emergency at hand. A silver
lining to that experience, if any is to be had, was the
opportunity for us to reconnect with nature, and I am
particularly pleased by our pledge in this plan to bring access
to a green or blue space within a 15-minute walk of everyone’s
homes, be that parks, canals, rivers, countryside or coast.
Our focus is on picking up the pace and scaling up at home, and
around the world, and that is why we are putting nature top of
the international agenda as well. We brought nature into the
heart of our collective response to climate change under our
presidency of COP26 in Glasgow. At COP27 the Prime Minister said
that
“there is no solution to climate change without protecting and
restoring nature”.
The House may have heard me before extol the marvel of mangroves
as the ultimate example of how investing in nature is an
essential, effective and cost-effective way to take on a
multitude of challenges. The key achievement of 2022 was the
agreement reached at the UN nature summit, the Convention on
Biological Diversity COP15 in Montreal.
To level with the House, there is much, much more to do to
restore the natural world. Some of the challenges are not always
so easy or so quick to fix as we might all hope, yet I assure
hon. Members that with our new legal duty to consider
biodiversity, guided by our environmental principles policy, we
are embedding nature in the heart of every decision that
Government will take for the long haul. We have a plan for the
whole of Government to support this national endeavour and we
have already started the journey with a great many
improvements.
We are replacing the EU’s bureaucratic common agricultural
policy, which did so little for farmers or nature, and rewarding
our farmers for taking action to help nature retain and regain
good health, reduce emissions and produce food sustainably. Those
things are absolutely symbiotic and we are leading the way in
making this essential transition. We have cleaner air, with major
decreases in all five major pollutants. Emissions of fine
particulate matter, PM2.5, the most damaging pollutant to human
health, decreased by 18% between 2010 and 2020. I want our air to
be even cleaner. That is why we are working with farmers to
tackle ammonia emissions.
Councils ask for a lot of powers, but I need them to use the
powers they already have, including on tackling litter and
fly-tipping, rather than just asking for more. I will be
publishing what they are doing and seeking to share best practice
across the country.
We are accelerating the rate of tree planting. The Forestry
Commission will start growing its estate and increase planting,
fulfilling its original statutory obligation to help to
rejuvenate the forestry and timber industry. We have strengthened
the financial support through our environmental land management
schemes and we will continue to promote urban tree planting so
children everywhere can enjoy their local woods.
On the chemical status of our water bodies, the science and
modelling are clear that it will take decades to recover and heal
completely, but we are keeping a spotlight on water quality and
getting industry to clean up its act. We are restoring 400 miles
of river through the first round of landscape recovery projects
and establishing 3,000 hectares of new woodlands along England’s
rivers, as well as doubling funding available for the
catchment-sensitive farming programme to £30 million in each of
the next three years, to cover all farmland in England. We have
already seen a huge improvement in our bathing waters. Last year,
nearly three in four beaches were deemed excellent—only about
half of them were back in 2010—but I share people’s concern about
sewage in our waters. That is why we, a Conservative Government,
turned on the monitoring, and why we are holding industry to
account on fixing this issue. Through our storm overflows
discharge reduction plan, we are requiring water companies to
deliver their largest ever environmental infrastructure
investment, an estimated £56 billion of capital investment over
25 years. We have set clear expectations on improvements on which
we will track performance. The next formal review will be in
2027, so if we can go further and faster, that is exactly what we
will do.
This issue remains an international endeavour as well. We have a
globally recognised track record of action, helping communities
protect and restore their national treasures. Reinforced by our
science expertise and financial support, we are helping nature
around the world. That is the right thing to do and it is
absolutely in our interests as well. Having committed to doubling
UK international climate finance to £11.6 billion, and to
spending at least £3 billion of that on nature, we are building
on decades of action, backing efforts to take on the whole host
of threats that now face the world’s flora and fauna well beyond
climate change alone. We are doing that through the blue belt
programme, protecting an area of ocean larger than India around
our biodiverse overseas territories, through our world-renowned
£39 million Darwin initiative, and through the illegal wildlife
trade challenge fund. We are ploughing all that expertise and
experience into our newly established £500 million blue planet
fund, and our £100 million biodiverse landscapes fund, to help
some of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable communities
restore, protect and connect globally important but fragile
habitats.
I am so proud that the UK is leading, co-leading and actively
supporting the global coalitions that are committed to securing
the maximum possible ambition and achieving the greatest possible
impact on everything from taking on the scourge of illegal,
unregulated and unreported fishing, to persuading countries to
agree a new, legally-binding global treaty to end plastic
pollution by 2040, to supporting efforts to establish a global
gold standard for taking nature into account across our
economies.
I could spend hours talking about nature, about our mission,
about what we have already achieved. As the Member of Parliament
for Suffolk Coastal, I am blessed to represent a very special
part of our country, with many precious habitats and protected
sites, on land and offshore. I always said it felt like I had had
six years of a perfect apprenticeship before I became the
Environment Minister in 2016. There are many more parts to the
plan that we published yesterday. I recognise that we have work
to do, and our aim is to catalyse action across Government,
across the economy and across the country, with the whole
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs family, our
agencies, including Natural England, the Environment Agency and
the Animal and Plant Health Agency, our delivery partners and
regulators, the whole of Government, and individuals, communities
and businesses, from farms to finance, all working together to
bring this to life.
Nature needs us to accelerate and scale up our help if we want to
enjoy nature and have its help for generations to come. Together,
we can achieve it. Whether someone lives in a city or town, in
the countryside or on the coast, we all have a part to play in
the truly national endeavour and the decade of global action that
we need now to see this through. I commend this statement to the
House.
13:40:00
(Leeds North West)
(Lab/Co-op)
I thank the Secretary of State for advance sight of her
statement. I am pleased that on this occasion we are actually
getting an oral statement, rather than a DEFRA Minister having to
be dragged to the House for an urgent question or sneaking
something important out as a written statement. However, even on
this occasion, she made a speech announcing this plan outside
this House yesterday. Unfortunately, my hon. Friend the Member
for Oldham West and Royton (), the shadow Secretary of
State, is unable to be here, as he has a pre-arranged medical
appointment. I am glad the Secretary of State is here to be held
accountable, but it must be difficult for her to continue to try
to defend her Department’s record.
The Conservative Government are big on promises but little on
delivery. The proof is in the pudding, and the Secretary of
State’s own appalling environmental track record speaks volumes.
As water Minister, she presided over a new sewage spill every
four minutes—321 years’ worth of sewage was spilt in just three
years; and she cut the resources of regulators that are there to
protect the environment by a third. Her three months as
Environment Secretary have not been any better. First, she broke
her own statutory deadline for publishing environmental targets.
Then she told Parliament that meeting polluting water bosses is
not a priority, before announcing measures that inflict more
sewage dumping and toxic air on our country. [Interruption.] She
can correct the record when she responds. Even her Department’s
own regulator, the Office for Environmental Protection, gave the
Government “nul points” on their 25 year environmental goals. On
chemicals, the Government are missing in action. Their UK REACH
system is evidently not working properly. Never mind Dr Dolittle,
it is Dr Damage—a lot.
Let us look at this latest plan, as I have questions. Why will
our sites of special scientific interest, which have been so
neglected, not be assessed for five years, until 2028? Why is
there no mention of reintroducing species to help nature
recovery, aid flood management and increase pollination? Does the
Secretary of State agree that she is betting the house on
environmental land management schemes—ELMs—by relying totally on
take-up and farmer co-operation? She had the opportunity to come
to Parliament to say, or to outline at the National Farmers Union
conference in Oxford, that she is on the side of farming
communities, but she failed to do so. Where is she on the
Dartmoor issue, and the increasing threat to access to nature?
How does she plan to deal with the 1,781 retained EU
environmental regulations we are going to have to deal with this
year?
Trust is an important word in politics, and it is clear that
there is very little trust in this Government to get anything
done. Actions speak louder than words. The environmental
improvement plan is full of praise for the action the Government
have taken since 2018 to deliver improvements in our air quality,
but light on detail on the actions they will take over the next
five years to deliver change. That is why when Labour plans to
introduce a stand-alone, ambitious, effective and comprehensive
clean air Act, it will do what the Minister will not: save lives,
save money and clean our air. Labour will expand meaningful
access to nature and clean up the Tory sewage scandal. We will
hold water bosses to account, not just pay lip service, and
ensure that regulators can properly enforce the rules.
This environmental improvement plan, which was so long in
gestation, still has glaring omissions, and there is no evidence
on how it will be delivered. Tony Juniper, the chair of Natural
England, said at the plan’s launch yesterday:
“It’s now all about delivery”.
Yet, DEFRA has continually failed to deliver. How can we trust
this failed Government to deliver for our natural environment?
Only Labour will deliver a fairer, greener future.
Dr Coffey
Well, what can I say? I am not sure how much that deserves a
response, but out of respect for the House I will say that it is
important to make sure that these long-term environmental plans
are in place. We brought in legislation saying that we would
refresh them every five years, and that is exactly what we have
done.
If we are talking about track records, of course the Labour
Government never did anything about sewage. They did not know
anything about it. [Interruption.] They did nothing—nothing. I am
used to the usual spew coming out of those on the Labour Front
Bench and, frankly, it is not good enough.
Let us go through some of the questions on which the hon. Member
wanted some updates. On chemicals, we still have the system in
place, and as is set out in the environment improvement plan, we
will be publishing a chemicals strategy this year.
On SSSIs, I am very conscious of the risks that exist. There are
variations in what is going on around the country, which is why I
have asked for an individual plan to be put in place for every
single SSSI. Natural England will be going through and making the
assessments of what is there and what needs to be done, and we
will get on with it.
I think environmental land management schemes have been
transformational. This is a journey for those in the farming
industry, who are the original friends of the earth—the people
who want a very special countryside—and that is why we have
brought forward measures, as my right hon. Friend the Minister
for Food, Farming and Fisheries laid out to the House when he
came here to talk about this transition last week. We will be
working with farmers, and indeed I will be at the NFU conference
next month. There has not been any NFU conference since I have
been in the Government, but we make sure that we continue to
speak to farmers and others.
On retained EU laws, I have already told Parliament the approach
we have set out. Where there is legislation that is superfluous,
we will get rid of it. We will be looking carefully at all the
regulations that are in place, and that is what we are going
through. It seems to have escaped Opposition Front Benchers’
attention that we have of course already repealed 146
regulations. They did not even notice, so there we go.
In the meantime, we want to make sure that we are holding
different people to account, but there is an individual
endeavour, a local endeavour and a national endeavour. That is
why provisions such as those on biodiversity net gain, which will
be coming into effect later this year, will start to help local
nature recovery strategies. It is why we have announced extra
funding for more projects, with second rounds of things such as
the landscape recovery scheme. There are also species
reintroductions happening in different parts of the country.
I am very pleased we have published our environmental improvement
plan. I think it shows a clear path for how we will get nature
recovery, recognising that this has been going on for centuries.
Finally, I am delighted to say that we in the UK Government
should be proud of getting nature very much at the forefront of
international thinking. We are leading the way on that, and we
are doing our bit around the world. I trust that we will continue
to be the Conservative party because we believe in the
conservation of our precious land.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
I call the Chair of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Committee.
Sir (Scarborough and Whitby)
(Con)
Goal 5 of the plan aims at eliminating waste, and while we have
made great progress—for example, in phasing out single-use
plastics and substituting more sustainable materials for plastic
in packaging for foods—the sad fact remains that our local
authorities are very good at collecting waste, but the majority
of our plastic waste is exported overseas.
Will the Secretary of State look at two things she could do to
improve that situation? First, will she look at the operation of
extended producer responsibility, and maybe look at what is being
done in Belgium to make sure there is work with industry to
incentivise investment in our plastic waste recycling here?
Secondly, will she look at setting a date, as my Committee has
suggested, for the phasing out and elimination of plastic waste
exports to countries such as Turkey, where standards are not as
good as ours?
Dr Coffey
On exports of plastics, we have recognised this issue and want to
make sure that we are not exporting to non-OECD countries, but
that does not mean that we give a blank cheque when there are
exports to member countries of the OECD. That is why we have a
rigorous process in place, but we will continue to investigate,
through the Environment Agency, where issues arise and get them
fixed.
On our thinking more broadly, one of our sadnesses during covid
was of course the explosion in single-use plastics and the
throwaway elements that were necessary for public health. We also
had a reduction in our recycling rates. We do want to turn that
around, and that is why we will continue to work on the important
EPR reforms to which my right hon. Friend referred.
(Brighton, Pavilion)
(Green)
At yesterday’s launch of the plan, the Secretary of State claimed
that
“we are embedding nature in the heart of every decision that
government will take”.
That is a very worthy aim, but how on earth does it square with
the action we see from her Department? Just last week, the
Department gave the green light to an authorisation of the
pesticide neonicotinoid, which we know kills bees. I hope she
will not tell us that this was just an emergency authorisation;
this is the third year in a row that the Department has ignored
its own expert committee on this issue, so this is now becoming
routine. How can she reassure us that when she says words such
as, “We are going to put nature at the heart of all our
environment policy making”, she means it? Where is the
consistency?
Dr Coffey
I thank the hon. Lady for that question. We commenced the legal
duty on public authorities, at national and local government
level, to consider biodiversity from 1 January, so that is
already in place. The environmental principles policy statement
was published yesterday. It will take some time for the
Government to bring that in, and it will come into effect
formally from 1 November this year.
My right hon. Friend the Minister for Food, Farming and Fisheries
went into considerable detail in the consideration of the
decision about neonicotinoids. Every year, if an application is
made, it has to be considered separately. From discussion with
our chief scientific adviser, my understanding about what
happened in that process—[Interruption.] That is not true. We
increased the threshold for usage and we set a bar, to be decided
by Rothamsted Research, for how much of the crop has to be at
risk. Only when those thresholds are reached can the
neonicotinoid be applied to the seed. That is further
strengthened by a prohibition on the planting of flowering crops
for, I think, 36 months—it may be 32 months, but certainly
between two and three years—after the use of the pesticide. Very
careful consideration has been given to the matter, and we
continue to consider these applications with a great deal of
care. I am conscious that with the sustainable farming
initiative, for example, we have brought forward eligibility for
integrated pest management grants so that we can continue to try
to accelerate away from using pesticides routinely.
(Ludlow) (Con)
I warmly welcome the incredible amount of work that the Secretary
of State and her team, fresh into post, have put into the
five-year environmental improvement plan. This is a holistic,
comprehensive update of the 25-year environment plan, and it
introduces for the first time a whole slew of targets and interim
targets on the journey to where we wish to get to in the next 20
years.
Looking at goal 3 on clean and plentiful water, a topic that has
been of great interest to Members across this House, I ask the
Secretary of State to take this opportunity to help Opposition
Members who seem to have deliberately confused what we voted for
in this House in trying to introduce targets, particularly in
connection with persistent chemicals. They are substances such as
flame retardants that are banned from use, but that exist in
sediment on our riverbeds and other places and are being released
through the natural process of decay. This is not something that
this House has voted to continue for 40 years, as some Opposition
Members have tendentiously claimed.
Dr Coffey
I thank my right hon. Friend for that. He is absolutely right to
say that a lot of effort has gone into this review. That is quite
right, because nature matters so much, not just to those of us
who have a passion for it, but because it is critical to the
global web of life.
This is not the first time that Liberal Democrats have put stuff
out and it has been a complete load of the proverbial. I will
make a point to the House more broadly about the chemical status
of water. In the last decade, while we were still a member of the
European Union, we added a particular type of chemical—it
includes elements such as mercury—to the list of those to be
considered in assessing the chemical status of water bodies.
Before that, nearly every one of our water bodies had good
chemical status. When that provision came in, none of our water
bodies had good status. Exactly the same thing happened to
countries such as Germany. This is a natural process, and we now
need nature to heal and recover before we can get that status
changed.
On the other aspects that are more within our control, we have
pressed the case through our strategic policy statements and
things such as the water industry national environment programme.
We are getting water companies to really tighten up and clean up
waste water treatments.
(Swansea West)
(Lab/Co-op)
Yesterday I introduced the Clean Air Bill, which would require us
to reach World Health Organisation air quality standards for
PM2.5 of 10 micrograms per cubic metre by 2030, in alignment with
the ambition of the EU, which is achievable. Yet today, five
years into the 25-year plan, the Secretary of State comes along,
on the 10th anniversary of the death of Ella Kissi-Debrah, and
extends that another 10 years to 2040. How many thousands of
extra avoidable lives will be lost due to that? How many millions
of children will have to go into hospital with asthma attacks
because of that delay? What will she do to bring forward that
target to 2030 in alignment with the EU? If we were still in the
EU, thousands of lives would be saved, instead of which she is
ensuring that thousands will die.
Dr Coffey
I am conscious of the hon. Gentleman’s passion on this and know
that he has a long-standing interest in air quality, as do I. I
seem to recall that, when I was first in the Department, the
focus was on NOx, because we were in legal breach, but we are not
in any legal breach now. [Interruption.] That is not the case
either. It was I who pointed out to the various groups at the
time that the thing that we should worry about is PM2.5 because
it affects everybody. I have long been passionate about this
matter, which is why, with me in post, we introduced the ban on
the sale of smoky coal and we got rid of wet wood as best we
could, because that was the principal source of what was
happening with PM2.5.
As I have said publicly, I would have loved for the target to be
2030, but the powers of the Environment Act 2021 require me to
believe that it is achievable. I am very sad that, in London in
particular, we do not seem to be able to fix the problem. Many
issues need to be addressed; we still have a problem in 14 out of
21 London boroughs. That is why I am very keen for the Mayor of
London not to be doing all sorts of tokenistic things that make a
marginal difference, such as the expansion of the ultra-low
emission zone, but to be encouraging the councils to use their
powers to inform people of the issues, so that we can really
tackle that PM2.5. If we can go quicker, the next time that we
review the targets I will make sure that they are changed.
Sir (North Herefordshire) (Con)
May I say a huge thank you to my right hon. Friend and extend a
big, grateful Herefordshire hug to her for this excellent plan?
Will she meet me to discuss the Environment Agency’s permitting
department, which I believe is struggling, the rivers Lugg and
Wye, and how we will deliver through the work that farmers
do?
Dr Coffey
I thank my hon. Friend for his question. I would be delighted to
meet him. Hopefully I can bring along the farming Minister and
the water Minister, because this is a good example of where we
need different agencies to come together, as well as our farmers.
We need to think through how we can improve the capture of
run-offs and other elements. That is why we have made sure that
money is available to farmers for slurry storage, for example, so
that we can try to trap ammonia, as well as for some of the other
activities that they can undertake. That is how we can help them
to do the right thing.
(Sheffield South East)
(Lab)
I want to declare an interest: I am a trustee of the small
charity, Fields in Trust, that works with some local authorities
in trying to achieve the target of no household being more than
15 minutes away from green space.
The Secretary of State said that this was about the whole of
Government. Before Christmas, the Secretary of State for
Levelling Up, Housing and Communities introduced a consultation
on changes to the national planning policy framework, which
required the 20 major urban areas in this country to have a 35%
uplift to their house building targets. On 9 January, the
permanent secretary and his officials came to the Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities Committee, and Emran Mian, the director
for regeneration, said that that uplift had been plucked out of
thin air and that it did not have to be followed if it meant
building on the green belt, but if it meant building more homes
on green spaces, the uplift would have to be implemented. So, if
in implementing that uplift—the 35%—authorities find that they
cannot deliver the Government’s target of everyone being within
15 minutes of green space, do they follow the uplift or follow
the aspiration on green space?
Dr Coffey
I hold the Chairman of the Select Committee in high regard. As he
will be aware, we do need to build more homes in this country,
and while we of course want to prioritise brownfield sites, I am
also very conscious of some of the changes that may be needed in
different parts of the country. While I of course regret, as
Secretary of State for DEFRA, the loss of any good
farmland—although protections are already in place, and my right
hon. Friend the Member for Sherwood is further consulting on
aspects of that—it is important that we can design in great green
space access. That might be something as simple as community
woods. I grew up in Liverpool—I was very aware of what was
happening in relation to the urgent question—and Liverpool City
Council has some of the best tree programmes. I think we can
design with nature in mind. That is why biodiversity net gain,
which this Government have introduced, will come into effect
later this year. Those are the sorts of important changes that we
can make in order to ensure that people have access to green
space.
(North Devon) (Con)
I thank my right hon. Friend for her statement. As I have
mentioned in this Chamber before, in my constituency we have
already seen a dramatic reduction in the number of storm
overflows released on to our beautiful beaches. Analysis has
shown that the only way to completely eliminate sewage overflows
is to dig up and replace 60,000 miles of old pipes with two
separated systems, or to build the equivalent of 40,000 Olympic
swimming pools of storage. Does my right hon. Friend know which
option the Lib Dems claim they would deliver?
Dr Coffey
My hon. Friend is a very good champion for her constituents and
for nature, and so she should be. I recall going to the beautiful
Croyde beach and doing litter picking, which brings joy in terms
of the beauty of nature. She is right to champion our
improvements on sewage. As she will know, the Liberal Democrats
will often say one thing to get elected and do the complete
opposite when in power.
(Cardiff North) (Lab)
The Government’s own regulator, the Office for Environmental
Protection, has found that this Government are seriously failing
on every one of the goals set out in their own 25-year
environment plan. What are the Government going to do differently
in order to deliver these commitments, or is this yet another
case of the Government talking the rhetoric of meaningless words
and not delivering?
Dr Coffey
I recognise what the hon. Lady has said. I was disappointed by
the OEP, given that it had put out statements that we were
getting cleaner air and making progress on all these things. I
was a bit surprised by the headlines that came out of that. Of
course, to some extent, one of the issues with the goals, which
are complementary goals, is that targets had not been set at that
point. I am very confident. This is a delivery plan.
Where is it?
Dr Coffey
As the hon. Lady will be aware, it is available—it was available
yesterday. I am conscious that it does not cover Wales, where her
constituency is, so I do not know what the Welsh Government are
doing in that regard. [Interruption.]
I am not decrying them. This is the Parliament of the United
Kingdom, so I am very happy to take questions from Welsh MPs and
have already done so. But what I am keen to say is that we have
already delivered. I have already shared information on how
bathing water has got much cleaner under this Administration, and
we will continue to do a number of activities. What we have done,
and what the Welsh Labour Government have not done, is transform
farming funding to make sure that we have sustainable food
production, but that we also protect and enhance the
environment.
(Ashford) (Con)
There are very many farmers in my constituency who love the
Kentish countryside and are proud to be custodians of it for this
generation. At the same time, they have to run profitable
businesses, producing and selling good, healthy food. Can my
right hon. Friend assure me and them that the new scheme has
enough strength behind it to enable them to run viable businesses
and to continue to protect and, indeed, enhance Kent’s beautiful
countryside?
Dr Coffey
I congratulate my right hon. Friend, who is right to stand up for
his farmers. Kent is the garden of our country and the producer
of many fine foods, fruits and, of course, wines. The same amount
of money is being dedicated to supporting our farmers and
landowners. I am conscious that we are on this transition
journey, and that is why I wanted to offer people opportunities
to get Government funding as we reduce the guaranteed BPS. We are
in a good place whereby farmers have a genuine menu from which to
choose—a lot of this was informed by a practising farmer, my
right hon. Friend the Minister for Farming—and, as well as saving
the planet, the farmers in the constituency of my right hon.
Friend the Member for Ashford () will have opportunities to
have a viable, sustainable and profitable business.
Dame (Hackney South and Shoreditch) (Lab/Co-op)
As my hon. Friend the Member for Cardiff North () highlighted, the Office for
Environmental Protection put out its report last week. It talked
about the need for
“better alignment and co-ordination at all levels of Government,
local and national, with actions that extend beyond Defra”.
Two years ago, the Public Accounts Committee published a report,
which the Secretary of State’s Department agreed with, in which
we described that simply as a lack of clout across Whitehall.
Further to the question from my hon. Friend the Member for
Sheffield South East (Mr Betts), how will the Secretary of State
ensure that these plans are actually delivered across Whitehall?
Does she have the clout and the backing of the Treasury?
Dr Coffey
It is the first time that anyone has ever accused me of not
having heft. Since the hon. Lady’s report came out—I am sorry to
say that I am not aware of it—we have passed the Environment Act
2021. That included a biodiversity duty, which we have commenced
from 1 January. We have set out the environmental principles
policy statement. The hon. Lady does make an important point: it
has to be done with local government, with individuals and with
businesses. That is why I am keen for councils to use the powers
that they have asked for in the past yet are still not using. It
is for them to decide, with local nature recovery strategies, how
they can best make nature improvements. Of course, we want to
help them achieve the best outcomes possible.
(Chipping Barnet)
(Con)
I welcome this hugely important plan for the potential that it
has to protect nature and the environment. Now, we need to see it
delivered. With that in mind, I urge the Secretary of State to
ensure that we are meeting our manifesto target of 13,000
hectares of tree planting every year. That is a crucial means to
meet our target of halting species decline by 2030.
Dr Coffey
As a former Secretary of State, my right hon. Friend knows how
important our Department is in ensuring not only that we are
champions for nature but that we deliver for nature. We are
trying to ensure that we increase the opportunities to plant
trees. We have had the woodland creation offer already. Some of
the changes that we are bringing through, as well as the targets
that we have put in law, will help us to accelerate that tree
planting.
(Tiverton and Honiton)
(LD)
These environmental targets will be a complete waste of paper if
there are very few farmers left to put them into practice.
Farmers have had their basic payment cut by 5% in 2021 and by 20%
in 2022, and it will be cut by 35% later in 2023. Farmers are
struggling to access schemes to supplement their income, and they
are struggling to meet the inflated costs of feed, fuel and
fertiliser. When I was walking down a lane in Devon a few weeks
ago, a farmer in a 4x4 wound down the window and asked me, “Do
you know what DEFRA stands for under this Government? The
Department for the Extermination of Farmers.” Can the Secretary
of State explain how the Government will support those farmers
who are being forced out of business to deliver the environmental
improvement plan?
Dr Coffey
I am not surprised by the quality of that question. The hon.
Gentleman represents a very rural constituency in Devon. He
should see this transition in farming as a positive action about
having sustainable production as well as saving the planet. It is
absolutely vital that our farmers are supported to do that. That
is why we have continued the £2.4 billion of available funding.
And yes, there will be a transition as the guaranteed payments
start to decrease, but we will be able to target the money and
pay the farmers for eco-services. That is critical to making sure
not only that they can have a sustainable business, but that they
work they do will enhance the nature that we all enjoy and that
they need in order to make sure we have future harvests.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
I call Kellie Hughes.
(Rochester and Strood)
(Con)
I, too, congratulate the DEFRA team, particularly my right hon.
Friend the Secretary of State, for bringing forward the
environmental improvement plan, which is full of deliverable
plans with real action. As she knows, I am a passionate user of
the River Medway in my constituency: I sail in it and swim in it.
I have the misfortune, however, of living not far from a storm
overflow, so it gives me great pleasure that, because of her
Department’s actions, 98% of all storm overflows on the River
Medway are being monitored and tested regularly. Will she outline
how the actions she has taken will further reduce the sewage and
dangerous chemicals that are pumped into our river?
Dr Coffey
My hon. Friend is clearly a champion of her special part of Kent.
The best way I can put it is that a plan was set out and
monitoring is taking place. We are not trying to hide
anything—far from it. We have opened up to the problem and have a
laser-like focus on tackling sewage. It is imperative that we
continue to hold the water companies to account. In that regard,
the investment will start flowing. That is all part of the
impending price review.
(Bristol East) (Lab)
I have had a pretty good read of the plan, and it is
disappointing that there is not more about the urban environment
and the contribution that it can make, particularly in terms of
the nature section. As the parliamentary species champion for the
swift, I am keen to see more swift bricks installed in buildings.
A lot has been said about trees, hedgerows and so on, but when it
comes to reversing the decline in swifts, we need to look at
buildings. Is that something that the Secretary of State can go
away and look at, and perhaps introduce it, despite the fact that
it is not in the plan?
Dr Coffey
I am very aware of swift boxes. There has been successful
awareness raising in my constituency. Indeed, I think the
guidance from the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities talks about what can be done to make safe spaces for
nature in our urban environments and in future buildings. That
is, of course, important. Our Department is not just for the
countryside—far from it. We can touch everybody’s heart when they
think about how they can reconnect with nature.
I will continue to try to make sure that prominence is given to
urban areas. I grew up in a city, and over 80% of people live in
urban settings. That is one of the reasons why the pledge is very
clear about people having access to a green or blue space within
a 15-minute walk. It is also why we will continue to focus on air
quality, which is of course a particularly prevalent issue in
urban situations.
(Harrogate and Knaresborough)
(Con)
I warmly welcome the statement. My right hon. Friend made an
important point when she said that the proportion of excellent
bathing water quality beaches has increased from about half to
nearly three quarters. That is very positive, but 98% of our
waters with bathing water status are coastal, and inland waters
with that status are mainly lakes. Does she agree that improving
river water quality is an important priority, too, and will she
back my campaign for the River Nidd to be given accredited
bathing water quality status at the lido in Knaresborough?
Dr Coffey
My hon. Friend is absolutely right to say how important this
issue is. It is not just about the coast. Traditionally, bathing
water statistics have focused on coastal areas, because that is
where the majority of people go to enjoy that leisure, so that is
vital. More broadly, the quality of water matters dramatically. I
think of our chalk streams, which are so precious.
Let me tell the House a little anecdote about an occasion when I
went to see the River Itchen. The landowner in front of me,
having spotted a bottle of dog shampoo, started to cry and said,
“This person may not have realised that they have just ruined the
chemical status of this river for about the next 25 years.” That
will not have been done deliberately, so we need to ensure that
everyone is more aware. I understand why my hon. Friend is
campaigning for his local river to be brought into the bathing
water statistics, and I am sure that his case will be considered
very carefully indeed.
(Strangford) (DUP)
While I note that the plan applies to England specifically, the
protection of 30% of land and sea, including through marine
protected areas, must apply equally to the Irish sea. What
discussions have taken place with officials from the Department
of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs in Northern Ireland
to ensure that Northern Ireland Water does not drop the ball, and
that that protection is fully extended?
Dr Coffey
The hon. Gentleman has made a strong point. In preparation for
the CBD COP15 in Montreal, we brought back together the four
nations of the United Kingdom that we are proud to represent. We
have the Joint Nature Conservation Committee, which is a body
that covers the UK. Last year, wearing a different hat, I visited
the Giant’s Causeway, which is, of course, extraordinary.
We want to ensure that there is more access to Northern Ireland
in this regard, and I know that that has been an important part
of the discussions that have taken place. However, we will also
continue to work closely with officials—although we all want the
Executive to be re-formed so that we can really make progress in
Northern Ireland, which is a fantastic part of the United
Kingdom.
(Southend West) (Con)
The quality of the water off the new city of Southend-on-Sea is
fundamental both to our world-famous cockling industry and to our
swimming group, the Bluetits Chill Swimmers, who swim all the
year round. I welcome the statement, but does my right hon.
Friend agree that claims by the Opposition parties that Members
have voted for 15 more years of sewage dumping are totally false,
and a bit rich coming from Labour, which ignored sewage
discharges when it was in power, and from the Liberal Democrats’
Minister for water in the coalition, who did nothing?
Dr Coffey
My hon. Friend has been in the House for a relatively short time,
but she has shown how savvy she is in standing up for her
constituents in Southend. Where we identify issues, we put the
spotlight on them and try to fix them. We do that because we are
Conservatives: we want to conserve, and we want to enhance. I
assure my hon. Friend that I will continue to support her in what
she is trying to do for the great people of Southend, and try to
ensure that our beaches are as clean as ever.
(East Devon) (Con)
I warmly congratulate my right hon. Friend and her team on
today’s announcement of the plan. Devon’s farmers produce some of
the best food and drink in the world; I should know, having
sampled a fair bit of it. They are custodians of our countryside
and have been for generations, and we owe them a debt of
gratitude and certainty. Will my right hon. Friend explain how
this plan will help them to go on producing fantastic food
throughout the south-west?
Dr Coffey
There is great food in a number of counties, and I do not want to
come between Devon and Cornish MPs about who has the right pasty
or where cream should go on a scone, but I will say to my hon.
Friend that it is very important for us to involve farmers and
landowners in improving our natural environment. I think that, by
default, most of them are already doing that, but I am very
conscious of the challenges they face. The Minister for Food,
Farming and Fisheries has been very active, in a number of ways,
in responding to the issues that they have raised. I am convinced
that what we are doing, and what we did last week, is opening up
many more activities that will allow us to pay farmers to
improve, for instance, the quality of soil and integrated pest
management. We will help them not only to farm more sustainably,
but to enjoy the extra benefit of ensuring that the quality of
Devon’s food is the best it can be.
(Kettering) (Con)
I thank the Secretary of State, and the Under-Secretary of State
for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, my hon. Friend the
Member for Taunton Deane (), for the tremendously hard
work they have put into developing this world-leading
environmental improvement plan. Local residents in the Kettering
constituency are keen to support any measures to protect,
preserve or enhance our natural environment. Does my right hon.
Friend agree that (a) nature has been neglected for far too long,
(b) environmental and agricultural policies were returned to this
country as a result of Brexit, and (c) she is drawing on (b) to
fix (a) so that we can clean our waters, tackle air pollution and
increase biodiversity?
Dr Coffey
My hon. Friend sums it up perfectly. By leaving the European
Union, we have removed ourselves from the constraints—the
handcuffs—of the common agricultural policy. We have been able to
develop a policy that, certainly in England, will translate into
sustainable food production and improving the environment. The
Lords are about to pass the Genetic Technology (Precision
Breeding) Bill—another Brexit freedom—which will allow us to
develop climate change-resilient wheat. We can use the best of
technology and our freedoms to do what is right for the farmers
and people of this country, ensure that we have a healthy and
wealthy farming community, and continue to enjoy all the fabulous
produce for generations to come.
(North East Bedfordshire)
(Con)
Going back to the Victorian era when the water companies were
putting in their pipes, they did not take action on sewage
overflow. Perhaps they should have. In the 13 years that the
Labour Government were in office, they took no action on sewage
overflow. Perhaps they should have. This Government are taking
action on sewage overflow, but doing so will cost tens of
billions of pounds of investment. Therefore, does my right hon.
Friend agree that it is right to work within the constructs of
this environmental plan and other environmental plans to achieve
that long-term change?
Dr Coffey
My hon. Friend is spot on. We identified the issue—indeed, it was
who spotted it early on as a
DEFRA Minister. He got on with it, and that is what we are
dealing with. The monitoring will be in place completely by the
end of this year, so we can have that laser-like focus on sorting
out the unacceptable sewage problem. My hon. Friend is also right
to point out that it will cost tens of billions of pounds. Some
of what was proposed before was going to cost hundreds of
billions of pounds, which would have added at least £800 to
people’s water bills. We need that balance and to focus on where
we can make the most impact right now. That is what we will
continue to do.
(Rugby) (Con)
I draw attention to my entry in the Register of Members’
Financial Interests. The Secretary of State will know that the
packaging sector and its customers welcome the measures in the
plan to reduce littering and increase recycling rates. Does she
agree that they will be at their most effective if they are
introduced consistently and at the same time across all countries
of the UK?
Dr Coffey
I understand the point that my hon. Friend is trying to make. We
have to make progress in this country. We are trying to get
consistency in the recycling process alongside the introduction
of the EPR, but although there are many things that we and other
parts of the UK agree on, we need to ensure that we have a plan
that will deliver our recycling targets that we have set in law.
We want to make this straightforward for our manufacturers. We
need to press on with the important targets that we have passed
into law in the past few days.
(Rother Valley)
(Con)
I was pleased to see that the environmental improvement plan
included the Lapwing estate near Bawtry, which is on the border
of Rother Valley, as a case study. This 5,000-acre piece of land
will abate emissions, store carbon and produce food. It is funded
partly by the Government. Can the Secretary of State confirm that
she will continue to fund such projects across South Yorkshire
and in Rother Valley to store our carbon, secure our food
supplies and support our local rural communities?
Dr Coffey
Indeed, there are a number of funding streams, of which our
nature for climate fund is a key element. My hon. Friend will be
aware that as we make the transition to environmental land
management schemes, we will continue to ensure that activities
that do good things for the environment will be rewarded. Indeed,
we will be going further by giving a premium where there is
greater connectivity, so that the opportunity is enhanced.
Improving the quality of our land is a symbiotic relationship.
That will have results in improving the biodiversity we all
enjoy.
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