Sustainable Farming Incentive: Species Management and ELMS Moved by
The Earl of Caithness That this House takes note of the
announcement of changes to the Sustainable Farming Incentive by the
Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 4
January, and the case for including species management within the
Environmental Land Management Scheme to support populations of
endangered species and biodiversity in general. The Earl of
Caithness (Con)...Request free trial
Sustainable Farming
Incentive: Species Management and ELMS
Moved by
That this House takes note of the announcement of changes to the
Sustainable Farming Incentive by the Secretary of State for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on 4 January, and the case
for including species management within the Environmental Land
Management Scheme to support populations of endangered species
and biodiversity in general.
(Con)
My Lords, tonight is Burns Night. All around the world people
will celebrate Scotland’s most famous bard and lyricist, but
Burns was also a farmer whose poetry reflected his view of the
natural world as a dynamic ecosystem that needed to be treated
with care for the sake of us all and our fragile planet. Over the
years his way of farming changed, and we ended up in 2020
lumbered with the discredited EU common agricultural policy.
During that time farming gradually lost most of its vital
connection with nature, which is one of the reasons why our
planet is under such huge stress.
However, in 2020, with the Agriculture Act, the Government set
out the new way forward for farming in England. The environmental
land management scheme was to become the main vehicle for
providing financial support to farmers in the future. The purpose
of ELMS is to reward farmers, tenants, landowners, land managers,
growers and foresters for delivering “public goods” and to
make
“a significant contribution to the environment”—
something that Burns would have thought logical. The new scheme
was to be phased in on a transitional basis, beginning in 2021
and ending in 2027. We are now half way through the transition
period. It is therefore a sensible time to stand back and assess
how it is working.
Transitions for most people are difficult and, like moving house,
emotional. I pay tribute to the farming community, who are
adapting to a new and evolving system, learning new bureaucratic
and technological skills, while still running their businesses
with many working seven days a week as well as having to coping
with an increasingly changeable climate.
The transition has not been, and is still not, straightforward.
Systems need to change and adapt as they are developed. The 2020
proposals of a sustainable farming incentive, local nature
recovery and landscape recovery have evolved. There have been
mergers of policy as well as additions and subtractions. This has
added complications for farmers in joining, adapting and changing
schemes: grants have been forgone and payment windows narrowed.
This year farmers will receive a minimum 50% reduction of their
direct payments, which for many are the only reason they are able
to stay in business. To date only 10% have engaged with SFI.
There have been concerns about the speed of implementation and
complexity of the scheme, the problems faced by upland farmers,
the need for more clarity and certainty as to what farmers need
to do, the need for tenant farmers to be able to participate
fully and, inevitably, the amount of funding available. The
Government have been accused of not providing adequate levels of
support to farmers during the rollout of the scheme. The
transition is clearly telling on some farmers, with calls to that
excellent organisation the Farming Community Network showing a
notable increase in stress and financial-related problems.
However, the overall feedback on ELMS has been that it is a good
step and in the right direction. The Government have shown
flexibility by addressing many of the concerns and further, much
welcomed, improvements to the scheme were announced in and
following the speech of my right honourable friend the Secretary
of State on 4 January. Nevertheless, that speech did not
alleviate criticism that the rollout of the new scheme has been
too slow.
The Office for Environmental Protection, in its recent report on
the progress of the Government’s policies for improving the
natural environment in England, argued that while some progress
had been made on implementation of ELMS, its rollout needs to be
accelerated. The Country Land and Business Association has
criticised the Government for not opening applications for the
updated scheme until the summer of 2024, arguing that farm
businesses urgently need more financial support now.
Getting more information and detail out to farmers quickly is a
must. I join the National Farmers’ Union in wanting full details
of the combined SFI/Countryside Stewardship scheme offer made
available as soon as possible, along with a date for when the new
application window will be open. The Tenant Farmers Association
reminded me that a similar summer promise was made last year, but
summer did not come until 1 September. I say to my noble friend:
that is not acceptable this year. It must be much earlier than
that.
It is good to hear farmers discussing how much of their output
has increased and inputs reduced through farming in a more
nature-friendly way. The improved payment rates for the SFI and
Countryside Stewardship scheme are to be commended. However,
farmers can now sign a five-year agreement using SFI payments,
which give a better return than producing food but with no
measurable benefit to nature. That might turn out to be a
catastrophic own goal. Can my noble friend reassure me and the
Nature Friendly Farming Network that a measurable level of
environmental benefit will also be required in return for a
grant?
The Government need to meet their environmental targets, in
particular their commitment to the apex goal within the
environmental improvement plan of thriving plants and wildlife.
There is a legally binding target for species abundance by 2030,
with a requirement to increase species populations by 10% by
2024. The Government have said that ELMS will support species
recovery and management action by farmers, landowners and other
managers. For the purpose of ELMS, the Government define species
recovery and management as covering those actions which
“increase the abundance of particular species, including by
managing other species (invasive non-natives and predators) that
present a threat, and supporting rare native breeds”.
Given all the international agreements and conventions to which
the UK has signed up, the additional national legislation, the
increase in organisations interested in areas set aside for
wildlife and the large sum of taxpayers’ money already spent
annually on agri-environment schemes, this country should have a
surfeit of wildlife. It does not, so one must ask: why has it
failed so badly? One part of the answer is that it is widely
acknowledged that there are three legs to the stool of nature
conservation: providing habitat, providing good food sources, and
legal predator management. The first leg has been available for
some time and the second is more recent. They are options within
SFI but the third is not—and a two-legged stool does not function
well.
It is just too simplistic and naive to blame all the failure on
farming operations. It is true that habitat provision through
agri-environment schemes has produced benefits for certain
aspects of the life cycle for a great many species. The provision
of attractive nesting habitat, foraging areas in summer and
winter, and winter food resources in the “hungry gap” has helped.
The cirl bunting and corncrake are notable beneficiaries. The
introduction of new premium payments for certain high-priority
actions, including nesting plots for lapwing, is welcome.
However, of deep concern are the many examples of the provision
of habitat alone not halting decline of species, let alone
bringing about recovery. I would mention puffins, Manx
shearwaters, water voles, brown hares, grey partridge, black
grouse, curlew and lapwing.
In 2015 and 2016, as part of the curlew recovery initiative based
on the Shropshire/Welsh border, 30 nests were monitored to find
the cause of curlew breeding failure in a significant local
population in excellent habitat. In each year, only 1% of nests
got beyond the egg stage to produce chicks. All chicks were
subsequently lost. Over 50% of the egg predation was by foxes and
25% by badgers, which are protected, with crows also being a
significant nest robber.
Approximately £23 million per year is spent on agri-environment
options to support breeding waders on grassland, but given the
poor results, one must question whether this is good value for
money. Clearly, more needs to be done and there is good evidence
across Europe that, where the provision of the right habitat
alone has failed, the combination of habitat improvement and
targeted, effective predation management can lead to the recovery
of species of conservation concern.
As a result of a conservation programme led by the RSPB, Natural
England, the Landmark Trust and the National Trust to exterminate
the rats on Lundy Island in the early 2000s, sea bird numbers
have been restored to levels not seen since the 1930s. For
instance, puffin numbers have increased from 13 birds in 2002 to
375 in 2019. Despite this species management success, the RSPB
still argues that management does not work. Its recent research
on the response of breeding waders to predation management is
arguably flawed, as it did not apply predation management to the
level of intensity recommended by professional game and wildlife
managers. That meant that it was always likely to be
ineffective—possibly, that is what it was designed to be. It was
also unethical. If one is going to take one species in support of
another, one needs to ensure that one’s approach is effective.
Furthermore, if the RSPB claims that species management does not
work, I wonder why it is a partner in the project to eradicate
stoats, which have been posing a threat to Orkney’s
internationally important wildlife since their introduction there
in 2010.
The Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust, or GWCT, has proved the
RSPB wrong on predation management of wildlife on farms. Thirty
years of careful scientific research on its commercial
demonstration farm in Leicestershire have demonstrated that
numbers of songbirds, and other wildlife numbers across the farm,
are significantly higher when there is proper species control
than when there is not. It has followed the three-legged stool
principle and, with management, songbird numbers have doubled
alongside a commercial farming operation.
It is good to read reports of the water vole, better known to
some as Ratty in The Wind in the Willows, returning to areas in
which it once thrived. They were virtually wiped out, mostly due
to predation by mink, which decimated whole colonies. Now, with
the successful use of the GWCT-designed mink trap, numbers are
rising again, proving that targeted management can benefit a
variety of endangered species.
Given that it is so important to improve wildlife numbers, I ask
my noble friend why the Government are not introducing a set of
funded standards to contribute towards the cost of the management
required to aid the recovery of species, especially those on the
red list, when there is so much evidence to prove that it
works.
The Government have set a good course for the future of farming.
It is farmers and land managers who will make it work, or not,
within the remit set by Defra. The recent welcome announcement
makes ELMS more attractive to farmers to sign up to. However,
farmers, as well as producing food, must be required to
demonstrate that the taxpayers’ money they receive is producing
public goods that make a significant contribution to the
environment. Species management can help in that and should be
added to the SFI options. If there are no public goods, the
Treasury will be much more inclined to reduce Defra’s budget than
to increase it. I beg to move.
3.40pm
(GP)
My Lords, I begin by thanking the noble Earl, , for securing this debate
and introducing it so comprehensively. It is a great pleasure to
follow the noble Earl, with whom I share a considerable passion
for soil health and soil quality, which we have often
discussed.
I agree in some respects with the noble Earl’s diagnosis of why
we are one of the most nature-depleted corners of this battered
planet. The Green Party right across the EU has very much led
opposition to the common agricultural policy, although the way in
which it was applied in the UK seems to have been particularly
poor compared with parts of the EU, in terms of environmental and
biodiversity outcomes. However, it is important that we add in
other causes of the problem and recognise that the Government
need to take a comprehensive policy approach.
Just this week, we had a debate in the other place following very
strong public backing of the petition to “get fair about
farming”. Giant multinational companies hugely dominate our food
system, and a handful of companies dominate areas such as factory
farming of chickens. That dominance has squeezed farmers’ margins
and forced them into farming systems that have done huge damage
to the natural world. I put it to the Minister that we are
talking about the SFI, and that the Government need also to take
action from the other side and make sure that farmers are indeed
allowed to manage their land as they would like to.
It is important in this debate that we look at the other context.
The Government have been doing trade deals, letting into the UK
food with standards considerably below the standards we ask
environmentally, as well as animal welfare standards. All these
things are acting against what the Government are putting money
into through their farming programmes. These issues have to be
looked at together.
I shall continue with the theme of the need for a systems
approach. We are in a climate emergency and nature crisis; we
have exceeded six of the nine planetary boundaries, as identified
by the Stockholm Institute. It is in the British countryside
where you can really see that happening. We do not talk about
this as much as we probably should, but the UN last year pointed
out that, in global terms, we have more problems with plastics in
our soils than in our oceans, to which a great deal of attention
has been paid. Since we are talking about biodiversity in
general, according to the terms of the noble Earl’s debate, I was
tempted to raise the issue of the biodiversity of our soils and
the research conducted in the past year. We have started to
realise the extent to which we are losing the biodiversity of the
microbiome of the soil. I am aware that the Minister is new, so I
am going to be kind and not push too far down this road today—but
he can expect more of it in future.
I turn to the overall view of ELMS and the impact it will have on
the targets of the Environment Act. I am sure that noble Lords
have seen an excellent briefing from the Green Alliance that digs
into that issue. It notes that this month’s agricultural
transition plan update does not provide evidence of how the
actions being encouraged by the update will impact on targets. We
need to see how those are joined up. These are the Environment
Act biodiversity targets that the Government are legally
committed to, yet how do the two things relate to each other? We
are not seeing the explanation, the figures or the setting out of
that link. We have a list of schemes that will contribute to
supposedly delivering the targets, but we do not know how or how
much, and we are not seeing an evaluation of how much progress
has been made. Is what is being suggested in this update enough
to get us where we are supposed to be by 2030?
Even where there is some detail, it did not relate the action to
what is currently included in the ELM scheme. For example, in
reducing greenhouse gas emissions, the biggest single measure
identified in the plan is using SFI to reduce emissions through
methane-suppressing feed additives for livestock. Yet the use of
methane suppressants—however much I might question that—is not
incentivised through any ELM scheme. Of course, your Lordships’
House—and the entire country—is acutely aware of the issues
around the state of many of our rivers. The focus has tended to
be on sewage and water companies but what is happening in terms
of nitrogen phosphorous and sediment pollution from agriculture
is a big part of the issues in the River Wye and in many rivers
in East Anglia.
The Office for Environmental Protection says that the scale of
reductions needed to meet the targets in the Environment Act may
require
“up to 100% of farmers adopting nature-friendly farming”
methods. At the moment, as the noble Earl said, we are at 10%. We
have a huge gap here that has not really been set out.
Looking at the context in which we are talking today, we of
course have to focus on the recent report from the Office for
Environmental Protection, which has to be described—fairly—as
scathing. It acknowledges that there has been some progress made
in the implementation of the ELM scheme but says that its rollout
needs to be vastly accelerated. The OEP says that, overall, it is
keeping in reserve the possibility of taking legal action against
the Government for failing to deliver on their legally binding
targets. That is the context we are in.
We are particularly focused on biodiversity so I will be positive
here and welcome the fact that, among the 50 new environmental
actions, the Government have introduced agroforestry and
restoring water bodies and water courses—and I think, at least to
some degree, ponds and mires, which is a really important area
that has not had sufficient attention. If the Minister has not
visited Wakelyns agroforestry in Suffolk, I would strongly
recommend doing so. If you want to see a long-term agroforestry
scheme in action, delivering what is visibly and obviously a
wonderful level of biodiversity, productivity and diversity in
the human diet, I would encourage going to look there.
Agroforestry is an area—I declare an interest, I suppose, as
having a fellowship with the Horticultural Trades
Association—where we ideally need a supply of locally grown trees
from nurseries here in the UK. Perhaps the Minister can comment
on how we will ensure that, if we go forward with this
agroforestry, we can have locally grown trees suitable for local
conditions all around the country—ideally native species, of
course—while making appropriate adjustments for the impact of the
changing environment of the climate emergency.
I also want to look at enhancing water bodies and water courses.
I would be interested in any thoughts that the Minister might
have about the restoration of ponds and mires. What we have seen
with industrial agriculture—the flattening of hedges and large
fields that the way we have administered the CAP has
encouraged—is huge amounts of the filling in of ponds, which are
absolutely crucial to biodiversity. In East Anglia, there are
some really exciting developments whereby old ponds are being
excavated, carefully and in the right way, by expert ecologists.
They are finding that the seed banks still remain there and, in
those ponds, species that we thought had been totally lost from
an area are in fact recovering. They are there; we just have to
give them the air, light, moisture and capacity to flourish. Are
the Government doing enough and providing the advice and support
that farmers need for this kind of restoration, which we need to
see on a large scale? This also has huge benefits if we think,
for example, about flooding and Slow the Flow; it is a really
important measure from the perspective of impact benefit as
well.
Now I come to a section where, I am afraid, I entirely disagree
with the noble Earl: predator control. I am drawing here on the
briefing from Wildlife and Countryside Link. It talks about the
funding of the management of wild species that prey on farmland
birds. Wildlife and Countryside Link says—and I agree—that this
is
“a distraction from the core objectives of the scheme. As
confirmed in the State of Nature Report of 2023, the decline in
the abundance of farmland birds is primarily due to increase in
intensive farming practices, not natural predation. Predators are
a marginal factor in farmland bird species abundance, for a few
species only”.
I accept the RSPB studies that the noble Earl questioned but I
would go broader and point to the reason why, in some areas, we
have such an abundance of predators. Of course, one of the key
factors, which has been increasingly highlighted in recent years,
is the massive release of large numbers of game birds,
particularly pheasants.
We are talking about a slow, non-native,
not-very-well-adapted-to-our-environment feast for our predators,
so we have lots of predator numbers. Now, having released those
pheasants into our natural environment, we are going to fund
farmers to do predator control. There is a very obvious
alternative: to stop, or at least massively reduce, the amount of
release of food into the environment. Then we will have fewer
predators. We might also have a bit more safety on our roads as
well, as an aside.
What we need to do, looking at this in a systemic way, is ask
what our entire countryside looks like. That is where I have to
raise the issue of the land use framework, something long awaited
that was dealt with at considerable length, in detail and
quality, by a committee of your Lordships’ House. We need a
vision of what the countryside should look like. It needs to be a
holistic vision that guides the whole ELM and SFI schemes. What
we really lack is an overall, long-term strategy.
On briefings, I point to the Nature Friendly Farming Network
briefing for this debate, which very much majors on and focuses
on the need for a long-term strategy. What we seem to be doing is
offering some money for this scheme and some money for that
scheme, but where is the picture of what the countryside looks
like? We know what the vision of the countryside has been over
the past few decades. It has been farms and fields getting
bigger, grubbing out hedges and getting rid of trees. That was
the vision. Now we are starting to establish a vision where we
acknowledge that we need to restore hedges and bring back trees.
We need a different kind of environment yet we are still a long
way from looking at proper crop diversity—genuine diversity, not
just two or three crops on a farm but scores of different crops
on a farm. I come back to Wakelyns as an example of what I would
say is the Green Party vision for what our countryside could look
like and how rich it could be. We need to look at this in a
holistic way.
I am almost out of time so I will come to one specific point
because I hope that this debate will be a useful way of settling
a debate that has been carried on in the media. As part of the
rollout of these schemes, the Government said they would maintain
the annual farming budget for England at £2.4 billion a year.
However, the Guardian has looked at Defra figures and concluded
that there were underspends of £110 million in 2021-22 and £117
million in 2022-23. The Government have said that those figures
are untrue. It would be useful if the Minister could set out in a
little detail, as time allows today, and say from the Dispatch
Box whether he believes that that promise of spending has been
met.3.54pm
(Con)
My Lords, it is a pleasure to follow the noble Baroness, Lady
Bennett. One could say that a farming debate is food and drink to
the Green Party—I apologise if that is a mixed metaphor—but she
might be interested, or perhaps horrified, to know that I agreed
with a lot of what she said in the first part of her speech. I
totally disagreed with what she said about predators, but that is
another matter. I never cease to be impressed by the breadth of
her expertise and knowledge; only today she has spoken on this,
her specialist subject, and on both maternity services in England
and military intervention overseas. My goodness, she has wide
experience and knowledge. Some say that less can be more.
I congratulate my noble friend on introducing this debate.
He raised some really important points, which I shall not repeat.
I have a close interest in farming because I have a small farm in
the east Midlands, where I live. I intend to use my experiences
to illustrate a bit of this debate and give a ground-level,
coalface view—again, I apologise for mixing my metaphors. I will
make three points.
First, the reduction in farming payments will hit farmers overall
and may lead to more big farms rather than smaller ones. While
some of this may be sensible—I am no great fan of subsidies; it
would be better if there were none at all—if there continues to
be a reduction in farm payments, the cost of food will inevitably
rise because farmers will pass the costs of their inputs and work
on to the consumer. At the same time, more farmers will leave the
countryside. If they do, the landscape may be changed adversely.
I seem to recall that after the Brexit vote the then Chancellor
of the Exchequer said that the farming budget would remain
exactly the same after Brexit. That does not seem to be the case,
unless the Minister would like to contradict me on that.
My second and more important point is about complexity. I support
much of ELMS and everything else, but I am rather keen on
planting trees. Unlike the noble Baroness, Lady Bennett, around
me I see trees and hedges flourishing. I have planted several
miles of hedges and acres of trees. I thought I would plant some
more because of the England woodland creation offer. This is the
letter I got back after my son, who is also very keen on planting
trees, sent in an application:
“Missing Evidence … It is mandatory to contact your Local
Environmental Records Centre … Historic England area team, Local
Historic Environment Service … and prior to applying”,
which is bad English. It continues:
“You must allow 28 days … You must … confirm this and … provide …
Evidence of checks made for priority habitats … Evidence of
checks made for protected species … Evidence of checks made for
designated heritage assets and local historic environment
records”.
I could go on, but that is quite enough.
The Government want me to plant trees and have offered to help. I
want to plant trees—and have planted a lot already—for the
landscape, wildlife and environmental improvement. What is the
point of all this bureaucratic nonsense dreamed up in a warm
office in Bristol or London? Let us get on with planting trees,
not filling in 10 pages of nonsense. It deters people and to no
good purpose.
My third point is about species management, on which the noble
Baroness, Lady Bennett, and I disagree. It is not really an
interest, but I should declare that in 1995 I was responsible for
the Eradication of Mink Bill, which noble Lords will remember
clearly. It got nowhere because it was a 10-minute rule Bill in
the House of Commons. As my noble friend said, mink have devastated
our riverbanks—not just the water voles, although they are
particularly obvious, but species such as kingfishers, because
they can get into their nests, whereas otters, for example,
cannot. There is some anecdotal evidence that otters are driving
mink out. I hope that is the case.
Going back to predator management, when I bought my farm 20-odd
years ago, we used to have curlews there every year. It was
magnificent to have them on a lowland farm in the Midlands.
However, now we almost never see them. The reason is probably not
foxes or badgers, because we do not see that many of them, but
corvids.
Noble Lords may not know that you need a licence to show that you
are allowed to shoot or control corvids. Magpies are very clever
birds and easily tamed. If noble Lords watch them over the next
couple of months, they will see them working their way down a
hedge, poking their heads in and looking for nesting birds. When
they find a nesting bird, they destroy it. Each magpie is
probably responsible for the destruction of 10 nests, but I do
not know, as I have not studied it closely enough. Under the
Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, you need a licence. There is a
general licence, but you need to be able to prove that the
magpies or crows are causing damage. What is the point of that?
Can the Minister confirm that that is the case?
As for grey squirrels, I plant a lot of trees, and in one wood, a
third of the trees have been killed by grey squirrels. I trap
them. This is legal, I am glad to say; otherwise, I probably
would not tell noble Lords. I have caught 14 in traps since
Christmas Day and I am catching them all of the time. However,
there are still hundreds left. They do so much damage. There are
people who challenge the trapping. I ask the Minister: have there
been any suggestions that we should make it illegal to kill grey
squirrels? We must reduce the number of them if the Government’s
ambition to plant more trees is to be realised.
There is a policy move to introduce a contraceptive, which will
be useful only for male grey squirrels. I hope that works.
Perhaps the Minister could comment on that later. Public
sensitivity about killing squirrels is also one issue. I would
also say there is some stupidity among the public. If noble Lords
do not believe me, they should take their dog for a walk in the
park and see what happens if it kills a squirrel in front of a
lot of other people.
My real point in this is that there is concern and confusion over
general licences and what one can and cannot do. They were all
stopped and then restarted in the last couple of years. I return
to what I said at the beginning: less—in this case, regulation—is
more. We do not need endless regulations and laws to do what is
right and humane. Some people will behave badly with or without
laws and regulations. We could do with less regulation on the
control of destructive species, as well as on tree planting and
agriculture as a whole.4.02pm
The Lord
My Lords, it is a pleasure to follow a fellow tree planter, the
noble Lord, . I give a tree to every
person I confirm as a sign of the care of God’s creation. I am
grateful to the noble Earl, , for securing this debate. I
declare an interest as a member of Peers for the Planet and as a
Church Commissioner.
Landowners and conservationists with whom I have spoken have
broadly welcomed the changes to the sustainable farming
incentive, not only the increased payment rates, which make
uptake more attractive, but the new areas of action, the
increased flexibility and the promise of a simpler, clearer and
faster application service. Let us hope it does what is says on
the new, streamlined tin. This better-rounded and more holistic
agri-environmental scheme in England will undoubtedly see a
greater uptake across all agricultural sectors. The tools are
certainly in place to help deliver both sustainable food
production and nature recovery.
In particular, I welcome the new emphasis on soil health. Being
under our feet, we too often forget it, but soil is perhaps our
greatest natural asset and the key to so much nature recovery. I
am glad that the noble Baroness, Lady Bennett of Manor Castle,
shares my enthusiasm for soil. Healthy soil supports a range of
environmental, economic and societal benefits. These include food
production, climate change mitigation and increased biodiversity.
These vital soil functions are at risk from poor soil management
or inappropriate land use, leading to soil degradation, soil
compaction and soil erosion from wind and water. Ecological
breakdown of our soils together with climate change are perhaps
the primary threats to food security.
Of course, any change to a scheme, or the start of any new
scheme, needs the test of unintended consequences, and I see
three risks that I would be grateful if the Minister could
address. First, I am conscious of the acknowledgment from the
noble Earl, , of the incredible
commitment of farmers and the added stresses and challenges of
new schemes. With the increased options that are now available
through a single application process, will farmers be supported
in the uptakes of those applications and given the right advice
and support? Can the Minister say what advice and support will be
given to applicants, particularly so that this public funding
secures the most value and delivers effective environmental
outcomes? We do not want to find, in future years, that we have
been paying for suboptimal or even perverse outcomes for
nature.
Secondly, it is critically important that farmers, once in ELMS,
are taken on a journey of increasing ambition for nature. There
is a risk that farmers remain on sustainable farming incentives,
the lowest level of ELMS, and pick the low-ambition, free-choice,
well-funded options that align with their existing farming
actions. This will not deliver the widescale change in farming
activity needed to restore declining wildlife populations. If we
are to progress towards the targets in the Environment Act, we
need a more joined-up nature landscape, with wildlife corridors,
acknowledgement of the impact of edge effects and some clear
understanding of which species we want to protect, recover or
thrive. If we want to continue to hear the magnificent call of
lapwings, curlews or corncrakes, clear strategies need to be
developed across whole landscapes. Yet in all this, there is a
risk that high-quality, high-yielding land will be taken out of
food production in favour of higher payments for environmental
goods. Can the Minister say how the correct balance can be struck
that benefits these various competing areas, so that we can
maximise both food security and nature recovery?
Finally, ELMS is just one side of the coin when it comes to
nature and farming. Funding to encourage nature-positive farming
needs to be underpinned by the right level of regulatory
baselining to prohibit actions that cause the most damage to
nature. However, the announcement by the Government said almost
nothing about regulation, other than to review the relationship
between Natural England, the Environment Agency and farmers and
landowners. This is at a time when EU regulatory legislation
protecting hedgerows, soils and watercourses came to an end on 31
December last year. This cross-compliance has now dropped out of
UK law, leaving regulatory gaps in these areas. We urgently need
a new regulatory framework, starting perhaps with the swift
progression of the replacement hedgerow protection proposals that
were consulted on last summer; they have yet to be replaced. My
final ask of the Minister is for a firm commitment that
protections for nature will, at the very least, be maintained
this year at the same level as the old regulations.
4.08pm
(Con)
My Lords, as a new entrant farmer, I think that there is another
kind of endangered species that we have missed here, and that is
the farmers themselves. As I have come into farming, lots of
people are just leaving it. One of the reasons for that is that
we have a sort of existential crisis around what a farmer is.
I would like to shift the debate a bit. I welcome ELMS and the
shift away from the CAP to what we have now—I have come in the
middle of that transition period—but one of the things that
worries me is that we probably almost need to do away with the
notion of the farmer itself. I do not even know what a farmer is
any more. Because of the way we have set up so-called incentives,
we are not really sure what we are doing. What we need to do is
think about some of the complex relationships that we have.
I welcome the Rock report—all your Lordships should read it. It
is an excellent document and it takes up this real issue of
tenant farmers in relation to landlords. We have to deal with
that issue. Defra is in there, as are environmentalists. Everyone
is thrown into this kind of complex relationship, yet the
definition of what a farmer is in a sense becomes
problematic.
I would argue that, at the moment, the farmer is almost enemy
number one. It never used to be like that. If you raise cows, you
are polluting the air. If slurry comes from your farm, you are
destroying the waterways. Suddenly, our romantic image of what a
farmer is has changed, and in a sense the farmer now becomes the
environmental villain in the piece. That is not a great incentive
to get into what is a very difficult industry and—I will not be
political here from this side of the House— to make money,
because at the end of the day, that is the driving force behind
this.
There is a need to see this as two things. It is a business, so
if you are going to incentivise, you also have to incentivise the
market. One of the things we need to do is to redefine farming
itself. I would prefer us to be called agri-innovators. I say
that because I looked at the amount of money and risk, and at the
hedge funds and everybody else who piled into the tech revolution
we had recently, where money was poured into start-ups. Strangely
enough, with that risk, nobody made a lot of money. When so many
of those start-ups came in, we threw money at these alleged tech
gurus who came out of university and gave them millions of
pounds, but we never saw a return on it. Yet when you look at the
farming sector, we do not see any of that kind of incentive in
terms of the market.
I would therefore argue, as a good Conservative, that the
Government stay out of some of this, and that we need an
agricultural sector that is linked to the market and driven by
the market. Obviously, there are controls that we need to have.
However, as my noble friend rightly said, if you are actually in
farming itself—or agri-innovation, let us call it—you are
incentivised anyway to control the species. You have to in order
to make the thing work. There is a market incentive in doing
that.
In addition, what really are we now? I look at the farming
community. We probably have some very big agri-industries, and I
agree that there are the bigger ones. But what happens with the
smaller sectors that I am involved in? We should be doing lots
more added value; we should be dealing with agri-tourism. We have
to be a little more imaginative. To be honest—I will probably get
some pushback here—I think that some of my peers are not very
imaginative in the way they are using their farms and the sector.
We have to think much more around different ways of doing
agriculture, which is not necessarily all about food production;
there is education, farming in terms of restaurants and food to
table. There are so many other things you can do around this
area, which does not just mean trying to load food on to a
lorry.
In some ways, I would like the Government to be thinking about
helping the industry to become almost much more like the tech
start-ups that we had, but perhaps this time with some more
incentives. The incentives must be properly around those farmers
who are moving innovation and doing things that are different,
adding value to their products. That is the new way to go with
this, and to avoid this area where new entrants—the few you can
get—are coming in, and everybody else is piling out.
What is being left with the land in the end? It is really left to
do other things, or bigger landowners come along and gobble you
up. There is a need for a different way of doing farming. I ask
my noble friend to help us by coming up with models that he could
share, on websites or wherever the Government can promote and
champion farms and agri-innovations that are doing things that
are out of the box and different, and encourage the kind of
energy for a younger set to come in. I will be honest: I am 64
and I am one of the youngest people in my sector. It does not
seem to be a young person’s game, which is another thing that we
must have in this area. We need to think about growing that
sector so that it is attractive for young people to come into.
That was not the case in the tech sector. We saw the age
framework there. I cannot understand why farming cannot have the
same kinds of interest and engagement.
Secondly, the sector has to have a link to science. That is why I
call it agri-innovation, because the new agri-innovator has to
have knowledge of science. You cannot be doing this without that
knowledge. It is not instinctive; there is some great technology
out there, some great things that we can be applying to the
space, and we are not doing that enough. The agri-innovator is
geared towards funds coming towards them and having an
agri-business, but at the same time the agri-innovator is doing
great things in the application of science to agriculture.
By the way, that is what I am trying to do at my place. We are
doing great things. Obviously, we are using green technology, et
cetera, but you can do lots of things, particularly on
agri-tourism, where lots of people now want to come to see,
understand and learn, so you are also an education space. So this
whole thing has to change. We have a new Minister here and I am
sure we will have new ideas coming in, but I am arguing that we
should be championing the whole idea of getting a new generation
into agriculture via that route.
On ELMS, I agree with my noble friend that I do not really want
lots of regulation. People are being very snooty about the market
and it working and not working, but we are driving this towards
the big incentive, which is “Cash in the bank, please”—because
that is really what this is about here, that is the big
innovator: “You will take care of your environment”, et cetera. I
know that mammon is not the only thing that drives us, but at the
same time, it helps. You are coming out of farming because you
are not making any money. The reality is that we need a vision
and leadership that really sees agriculture as business, as
science innovation and as something that we feel that we can
actually make money from and get a real job from. So I urge the
Minister to address some of these issues and come up with some
answers on how he thinks we can make this work so that Britain
can once again become a leader in this sector.
4.19pm
of Hardington Mandeville
(LD)
My Lords, I congratulate the noble Earl, , on securing this important
debate and on his excellent introduction to the subject, and
welcome the Minister to his first debate in the Chamber. I am
pleased to be able to tell the noble Lord, , who is a
pleasure to follow, that there is a lot of innovation in science
and technology going on in the agriculture industry already.
Every day of every year, the country and its residents ask
farmers to perform a miracle. Without this miracle, we simply
could not survive as a human population. We ask them to produce
the healthy, nutritious and affordable food that sustains us all
as a human population. At the same time, we ask them to deliver
positive outcomes for the environment, our landscapes and our
biodiversity. I have met countless farmers who have decided to
ignore the binary choice of producing food or improving the
environment. They already embrace a farming approach that seeks
to deliver the production of food alongside, and in harmony with,
environmental enhancement and biodiversity gain.
There is a great deal of consensus, both within this Chamber and
across our rural communities, that this approach is the only way
to succeed in future. We cannot deal with the nation’s vital food
security without our hard-working farmers. At the same time, it
is impossible to rectify the environmental damage that has
occurred in recent decades without the help, support and local
knowledge that exists within our farming communities.
When first introduced, ELMS had three strands—sustainable farming
initiative, local nature recovery and landscape recovery. SFI was
a universal scheme available to all farmers and those with
land-managing responsibilities. But there have been changes along
the way. In January 2023 came the announcement that ELMS would no
longer introduce a new local nature recovery scheme. This would
instead evolve into the existing Countryside Stewardship scheme.
The Government’s rollout of ELMS has been criticised for creating
complexity and uncertainty among farmers and other land managers,
as was excellently demonstrated by the noble Lord, .
If the recent changes to SFI announced by the Secretary of State
do not underpin this crucially important balance, it will fail.
Unfortunately, recent experience with the SFI does not bode well.
Since the original launch of the SFI, we have seen flip-flopping
after flip-flopping of the measures being incentivised. The
constant altering of payment rates and a horrendous underspend
have seen farmers’ funding cut by circa 50%, while at the same
time their prospects of receiving new funding have become more
and more challenging. While there are substantial increases to a
few payment options in the January announcement, many are
unchanged. There is less than hoped for to attract upland and
hill farmers to change their farming practices to deliver more
for nature, given that much land is tenanted or common land.
Establishing a single application process to enable farmers to
apply for the SFI and the mid-tier Country Stewardship scheme at
the same time is welcome. However, the Government have said that
this new scheme will be available from summer 2024. The Country
Land and Business Association has criticised the Government for
not opening the applications for the updated scheme until summer
2024, arguing that farm businesses urgently need more financial
support.
It takes six to 18 months to negotiate a Commons agreement, so if
the detail is not available until summer 2024, new agreements
will not start until late 2025. This is all taking too long.
While there are some generous supplements proposed for rewetting
and natural flood management, these require farmers and commoners
to be able to undertake capital works. But the requirement to
defray those substantial costs in advance before being reimbursed
remains a major block to moorland restoration. Overall, for the
uplands it is too little, too slow and too vague. Historically,
this Government wanted to achieve 70% of farmers entering 70% of
their land into the SFI. Today, less than 10% of farmers have
applied to SFI.
In turn, an annual underspend of over £100 million in such an
important policy area is bad enough, but when, in the last few
years, over £100 million a year has been taken from the funding
that was already going to the very community we are seeking to
support, it is almost unforgivable.
The underspending on the farming budget is justly criticised. As
part of the rollout, the Government said that they would maintain
the annual farming budget for England at £2.4 billion, as has
already been referred to. However, as has already been said, the
Guardian reported that the figures from Defra indicated that
there was an underspend in the Government’s environment farming
schemes of £110 million in 2021-22 and £117 million in
2022-23.
I thank the noble Baroness, Lady Bennett of Manor Castle, for
raising the issue of the land use framework. Can the Minister
perhaps say when, if ever, it will be published?
I concede that the announcements made by the Secretary of State
earlier this month have seen some improvements. For example,
increased payment rates for species-rich grassland are welcome
and long overdue, but let us be clear: this covers only around
0.1% of farmland in this country. There is precious little in
these changes to support biodiversity improvement in the
remaining grasslands, which can, if properly managed, become a
thriving habitat for many iconic species in this country. I am
sure that this House does not need to be reminded that we have
lost over 90% of our hay meadows since the 1930s.
This is not about creating a chocolate box vision of a bygone
era. Diversity of species benefits so much more than the simple
flora and fauna of a field. We are now recognising the importance
of multispecies pastures as reservoirs of beneficial predators.
The technical term biological pest control, which is standard
practice today in more than half of our horticulture production,
is, at its heart, little more than the eradication of pest,
disease or weed populations by a natural predator, whose
population can be encouraged by a richer tapestry of habitats for
food production and environment. I am afraid that I see little in
the Secretary of State’s announcements in this area.
The NFU has always supported sustainable food production
alongside environmental work, provided that domestic food
production levels are at least maintained, but the impact of this
updated SFI is not clear. For arable farmers, some of the
best-paying options are where they take land out of
production—the right reverend Prelate the referred to this.
On species management, the Government have said that the ELM
scheme will support species recovery and management action by
farmers, landowners and other managers. The Forestry Commission
argues that, although wild deer contribute to the UK’s
biodiversity, they can have a negative impact, because they
browse on the seedlings and regrowth of certain trees and plant
species. Deer populations are currently unsustainable and culling
is now necessary. The same applies to the grey squirrel
population. The Government have to provide realistic future
certainty on a clear and stable ELM scheme, rather than this
intensely frustrating drip feed of SFI options.
With 10 Secretaries of State in 13 years, it is perhaps not
surprising that the Conservatives have failed to grasp the
biggest opportunity in 70 years to recover nature. During the
last seven-year period of mismanagement, the Conservatives have,
unbelievably, increased core Defra staff almost fourfold, from
1,800 in 2016 to nearly 7,000 in 2023. Investing in nature is
good value, and the Liberal Democrats will increase the
agricultural budget by an additional £1 billion to ensure that
farmers get the fair deal they deserve.
I strongly support using ELMS to support biodiversity, as I have
highlighted, including specific management to support populations
of endangered species in all habitats across the UK landscape.
However, we will not achieve that with the current set of
announcements, or without taking farmers with us on a journey
where they can be properly rewarded for the vital role they play
in addressing the declines we have seen in too many species
across the UK. If the current Government continue as they are,
with uncertainty and incompetence, before long it may well be the
British farmer who becomes the endangered species.
4.30pm
of Ullock (Lab)
My Lords, I thank the noble Earl, , for introducing this debate
and for his clear and thorough introduction. As he did, I pay
tribute to our many farmers, who have been going through a very
difficult time in recent years. I also declare my interest, as
laid out in the register, as president of the Rare Breeds
Survival Trust.
We know that farming has a major impact on biodiversity and the
natural world—the right reverend Prelate laid that out extremely
clearly—so it is really important that farmers are properly
supported to change how they farm so that they can remain
resilient in this time of nature and climate crisis. Noble Lords
discussed a number of concerns, some of which were raised by the
Office for Environmental Protection earlier this month on
progress in the implementation of ELMS. Although some progress
has been made, it is clear that noble Lords and farmers feel that
its rollout needs to be accelerated. The House of Commons
Environmental Audit Committee also found that there was
uncertainty about exactly how the scheme would operate. As noble
Lords have also mentioned, this has particular challenges for
tenant farmers and commoners.
But we broadly welcome the fact that we have an updated
transition plan, which is what we needed. This has been welcomed
by other organisations. For example, the Agricultural Industries
Confederation has welcomed the changes, in particular the
streamlining of the process for applications, and the NFU has
welcomed the increase of some payments and support for a greater
number of actions. However, it has also argued that the
Government should provide further details about exactly how the
objectives would be delivered. The noble Earl mentioned that in
his introduction.
As has also come across very clearly in this debate, the
Government need to ensure a successful rollout to properly
harness the opportunities for farm businesses, nature and our
climate. The CLA, among others, has criticised the Government for
not opening applications for the updated scheme until this
summer. A number of noble Lords mentioned this. For example, when
does summer start and end?
Farm businesses need action and financial support urgently.
Nature Friendly Farming sent a very helpful brief, in which it
mentioned its concerns that this delay could bring real cash flow
problems for farmers. It has asked Defra to explore ways to
alleviate this. It suggests introducing a one-off lump sum
payment as an alternative to annual delinked payments. Can the
Minister say whether Defra has looked at ways to alleviate the
bumpy ride that farmers have during this process?
Although we are pleased to see that the changes are largely
positive for nature, including the expanded set of actions, the
average 10% uplift in payments, increased payment frequency and a
commitment to double the number of agreements for more complex
and targeted environmental land management, still more needs to
be done. The changes will expand the contribution that farmed
landscapes make to achieving our nature recovery targets in the
Environment Act. However, as the right reverend Prelate the
and the noble Baroness,
Lady Bennett, asked, how are we going to use this to dramatically
increase our soil health? That is critical if we are to make real
progress.
I should say that I thought it wonderful that the right reverend
Prelate hands out trees at confirmations. That is fabulous. I
shall talk to our church about doing the same.
It remains to be seen whether the incentives we now have will
result in the right level of action at the required scale. Can
incentives alone achieve this? If they cannot, there is a real
risk that Defra could miss what are pretty ambitious goals.
Although there has been commendable progress on the development
of farm payments, this could be undermined by a lack of
regulation and enforcement—again, something mentioned by noble
Lords during this debate. The noble Baroness, Lady Bennett of
Manor Castle, talked in particular about the lack of evidence to
show how ELMS will deliver against the Environment Act targets.
Of course, there is no publicly available data to demonstrate how
the payment rates have been calculated, how Defra evaluates
progress and how value for money is secured. How will these
robust rules be established and how will the gaps following the
loss of cross compliance be closed? Will the Government publish
their analysis of the actions needed under ELMS to deliver the
Environment Act targets, as well as any gaps that have been
identified? Has Defra considered publishing its scheme payment
methodologies, as well as providing a clear payment strategy and
the outcomes that are expected from farmers taking the
grants?
The 2020 agricultural transition plan included actions to create
and maintain habitats but did not include species management
specifically. Instead, it is listed as an example of the type of
action that would be supported through what was then the local
nature recovery scheme. The Government have confirmed that ELMS
would support minimising harm caused by invasive species and
promote the recovery of threatened native species. I have a
particular interest in this, living in Cumbria: we see red
squirrels out of our window and there is a real threat from the
grey squirrel population in the areas where we are still
fortunate enough to have red squirrels.
The case for supporting species management as part of the ELM
scheme, brought forward in the Motion today, is advocated by the
Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust, which argues that not
enough focus has been given to species management; I thank it for
its briefing on this matter. However, the Countryside Stewardship
scheme already includes the control and management of some
invasive non-native species; I am sure that the Minister will say
the same. We question whether species management should be funded
through ELMS, particularly the management of wild species that
prey on farmland birds. As we have heard, last year’s State of
Nature report concluded that the decline in farmland birds is
mainly due to an increase in intensive farming practices, not
natural predation. The RSPB has further studied these impacts and
found that predator control interventions carried out at the farm
level—it is important to have that distinction—are not sufficient
to make a difference.
I am aware that there have been challenges to this during the
debate but we believe that ELMS should be focused on
nature-friendly farming to help meet our nature and climate
targets, rather than funding interventions that are already
accessible through the Countryside Stewardship scheme. Perhaps
extending that needs to be looked at.
Finally, I come to the important point made by the right reverend
Prelate the about farmers needing
improved support and advice services. The transition from BPS to
ELMS is significant and farmers need to be fully supported
through this transition. The current advice service, the Farming
Resilience Fund, is due to end next year. Can the Minister
explain what will replace it?
4.38pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs () (Con)
My Lords, I declare my interests in farming, fishing and land
management, as set out in the register. I congratulate my noble
friend on securing this important
and timely debate.
I welcome this opportunity to speak about the changes to our
environmental land management schemes and the case for including
species management within the Countryside Stewardship section.
Species management plays an important role in meeting our
biodiversity targets. I am grateful for the many thoughtful and
knowledgeable contributions that noble Lords have made today; I
will return to this point in just a moment.
Given the relevance of this debate, it is worth highlighting how
we are seizing the opportunities of moving away from the EU’s
inflexible common agricultural policy and implementing our own
bespoke environmental land management scheme, as this move
constitutes the main element of the agricultural transition plan,
as the noble Baroness, Lady Hayman of Ullock, explained so well
just now.
First, and contrary to what was said by the noble Baronesses,
Lady Bakewell and Lady Bennett, we are maintaining the £2.4
billion budget for the sector across this Parliament by using
money released from the winding down of the basic payment scheme
to fund our new set of ELMS modules aimed at improving the
environment, productivity and the health and welfare of
animals.
As many noble Lords will know, our ELMS modules fall into three
main parts. The sustainable farming incentive pays for standard
actions that are needed across the farmed landscape to deliver
our environmental objectives. Since its launch, we have seen
growing uptake for the SFI. As of yesterday, we have received
more than 9,300 applications, which is approximately 15% of all
farmers. Importantly, feedback from pilot participants has helped
to shape the scheme to ensure that it is flexible and works for
all farmers across England. As of this month, for those actions
already agreed with the Rural Payments Agency, farmers have taken
up actions which mean that circa 123,000 hectares of arable land
is being managed without insecticides and circa 53,000 hectares
of low-input grassland is focused on improving
sustainability.
The second part of ELMS, Countryside Stewardship, pays for
locally targeted actions relating to the creation of specific
habitats and the management of some species. I reassure the right
reverend Prelate the : Countryside Stewardship
schemes have helped to maintain and restore more than 10,000
kilometres of existing hedgerows and to plant an additional 4,000
kilometres across the country.
The third part, landscape recovery, is aimed at farmers and land
managers who want to take a more long-term and large-scale
approach to producing environmental goods on their land alongside
food production. The first round of landscape recovery in 2023
focused on species recovery and river restoration. There were 22
successful projects. Among other things, they target the
conservation of more than 260 flagship species. The second round
of landscape recovery focuses on net zero, protected sites and
wildlife-rich habitats. There are 34 shortlisted projects that
will deliver a wide range of environmental benefits, including
restoring more than 35,000 hectares of peatland and creating more
than 7,000 hectares of new woodland.
At the Oxford Farming Conference earlier this month, the
Secretary of State announced an update to the agricultural
transition plan. This represents the biggest upgrade to farming
schemes since the start of the agricultural transition in 2021.
The key message from the Secretary of State, which I reiterate
today, is that we are delivering more money, more choice and more
trust. On money, we have updated the payment rates for existing
SFI and Countryside Stewardship actions, increasing rates by an
average of 10% across the board. Farmers will also be paid a
premium for certain actions which deliver higher value
outcomes.
On choice, we want to ensure that there is something available
for every farmer regardless of whether they own or rent their
land. We are adding around 50 new actions to our schemes and
amending many more after taking feedback from farmers,
researchers and stakeholders to improve and expand existing
actions, creating the most flexible and comprehensive offer yet.
For example, we have added five new actions and amended four
existing ones to support the management of rivers and their
catchments. These focus on slowing the flow of water through the
landscape, thereby helping to reduce the impact of extreme
weather events such as those that we have experienced
recently.
Importantly, to build trust, we have listened to farmers and want
to enable every farmer to access our schemes quickly and simply.
We will be streamlining the application process by bringing
together SFI and Countryside Stewardship mid-tier applications
and exploring how we can simplify the Countryside Stewardship
higher-tier application process as well. This and other changes
will make it easier for our schemes to slot seamlessly into farm
businesses. That will help to ensure that we get the scale and
ambition we need to achieve our targets, including having 70% of
farmers signed up by 2028.
I know from personal experience that no one cares more deeply
about the land, the nature around them or the health of their
farm than the farmer or land manager who lives and works there
every day. The Government are keen that the relationship between
farmers and regulatory bodies moves towards one of working
together and building trust, and the guidance from the Government
to regulatory bodies will reflect that farmers and land managers
are the solution, not the problem, as my noble friend suggested. I
should add that the Government support a range of innovations,
but I shall take away my noble friend’s thoughts on innovation
and consider them further.
My noble friend and other noble Lords asked
about the balance between environmental benefits and food
production. The Nature Friendly Farming Network is particularly
interested in this point too. I know that my right honourable
friend in the other place, the Farming Minister, met the Nature
Friendly Farming Network on Monday this week. I was delighted to
hear that they had a productive discussion on this topic and are
working constructively together on potential routes forward.
I turn to species management, which my noble friend and other
noble Lords spoke on with such knowledge today. As my noble
friend explained, the evidence clearly points to three key
functions that support biodiversity: suitable habitat, food
source, and predator management. All three will be required if we
are to hit our biodiversity targets. The lack of suitable habitat
in good condition, and food scarcity, particularly over winter,
are two of the primary reasons for species decline. We have many
actions within ELM schemes that pay for habitat creation and
management, and more are being added later this year. We also
have specific actions to provide overwinter food for farmland
bird species to boost their recovery.
Alongside those two critical components, we need predator
management to support the recovery of certain species and
priority habitats. Through Countryside Stewardship we already pay
for actions to manage deer and grey squirrels to protect our
woodlands, a subject raised by many noble Lords today, as well as
the control of invasive non-native plant species such as Japanese
knotweed and Himalayan balsam. This year we are expanding these
offers to fund management across the landscape, beyond woodlands,
and we are increasing payment rates to better reflect the
complexity of the management actions that are required.
From this year, for the first time, we will also pay for the
management control of edible dormice and American mink. The
edible dormouse—a somewhat curious name, which I understand stems
from the Romans acquiring a taste for this rodent—were first
introduced to the UK from Europe in 1907. They cause damage to
trees by bark stripping and ring barking, and they are known to
eat fruit crops and compete with hole-nesting birds for nest
boxes, and to predate on their eggs.
My noble friend spoke with great emotion
about the American mink, which is a widespread non-native
invasive species with a broad diet that includes small mammals.
The American mink has heavily preyed on our native water vole
population, which is now endangered, as my noble friend
mentioned. The key point, raised by the noble Baroness, Lady
Hayman, and others, is that management of other
generalistpredators such as foxes, crows, stoats and weasels can
and should be undertaken by farmers and land managers in
accordance with the general licensing rules, which I appreciate
have been a challenging area in the last year or so.
My noble friend and others asked an important
question concerning how we have taken species which are already
included under general licences, such as GL38 for stoats, into
account. I note that the evidence requirements for permitting the
control of a species differ from the evidence requirements to
incentivise the management of that same species through our
schemes. The latter requires—
(Con)
My question really is: why do we need general licences and so on?
We know that crows are very destructive, for instance. We have
mentioned squirrels, mink and magpies. Why do we need a licence
at all, general or otherwise? Is it to keep civil servants
working?
(Con)
My noble friend raises a good point. It is the current law of the
land. Perhaps I could take that point away and have a further
discussion with him at a later stage.
Turning to future plans, I hope to reassure my noble friend and
others in the House that, as part of the rolling review process,
we will continue to explore whether to include additional species
management actions within our schemes. This will involve working
closely with stakeholders and farmers to understand specific
issues as they emerge. It will keep our offers, including
payments, up to date and allow us to respond to farmer feedback
and changing scientific evidence to maintain progress towards
achieving our biodiversity goals.
The noble Baroness, Lady Hayman, the right reverend Prelate the
and the noble Baroness,
Lady Bennett, raised questions about soil. I emphasise that
healthy soil, abundant pollinators and clean water are the
foundations of our food security; I am sure that they would agree
with me on that. The SFI pays farmers to improve and conserve
their soils and provide flower-rich habitats for pollinators and
other beneficial invertebrates. These actions support the
delivery of our environmental objectives; they also benefit food
production, by reducing farmers’ reliance on costly artificial
inputs.
The noble Baroness, Lady Bakewell, raised the issue of the land
use framework, which I know is due to be published shortly. I am
afraid I do not have an exact date for the noble Baroness, but
perhaps I can get back to her on it at a later date.
In conclusion, our agricultural transition plan represents the
most significant upgrade to farming support schemes since we
gained the freedom to design and implement options that support
the unique nature of our countryside. The Government will ensure
that we maintain progress towards our outcomes by keeping our
schemes under review, while ensuring that our offers reflect the
latest scientific evidence and represent good value to both
farmers and taxpayers. If I have missed any specific points from
noble Lords or noble Baronesses, I will write to them in due
course. I thank my noble friend for the opportunity to have this
important debate.
4.53pm
(Con)
My Lords, I am extremely grateful to all noble Lords who have
taken part in this debate. I also conscious of my noble friend
Lord Robathan’s remark that “less can be more”, so I will curtail
quite a lot of what I might be able to say.
However, I want to pick up one point made by the right reverend
Prelate. He might not be aware, but it was due entirely to the
work of the noble Baronesses, Lady Bennett and Lady Hayman, and
myself that we got soil into the environmental improvement plan.
It was promised through the soil health action plan. It was the
pressure that we put on the noble Lord, , that got the Government to
change their view. It is a pity that the soil health action plan
was not implemented, because the OEP is having great difficulty
in getting any measurement of how soil can be improved.
I am extremely grateful to my noble friend the Minister. Again,
we are lucky enough in this House to have a Minister who is
experienced in farming and the countryside and who understands
the matter probably far more than his civil servants. When it
came to his remarks about the difference between management
control of grey squirrel and deer and control of other species, I
thought he was dancing on a pinhead. His officials need to be
kicked pretty blooming hard and told that they need a better
argument than that.
The Government have set farmers legally binding targets for 2030,
but they are not letting farmers have a full toolbox of measures
to tackle that. There is a risk of creating perfect habitats with
taxpayers’ money for a whole range of species which would just
become population sinks unless there is more help for farmers in
protecting those species from predators.
I hope that my noble friend the Minister will take two serious
messages back to his Secretary of State and to No. 10. First, we
need to get on with SFI schemes. It is no good just saying, “It’s
going to be in the summer”; we want it as soon as possible.
Secondly, we need more on predator management.
Motion agreed.
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