-
sets out major post-Brexit policy to invest in the
environment and take back control for farmers after almost 50
years under EU rules
-
New system of “public money for public goods” will
support a Green Brexit and deliver better environmental
outcomes
-
Seven year agricultural transition period gives farmers
time to adjust as they plan for the future
Legislation to deliver a cleaner and healthier environment for
future generations after nearly half a century under EU rules is
being introduced into Parliament today (12
September).
The Agriculture Bill sets out how farmers and land managers
will in future be paid for “public goods”, such as better air and
water quality, improved soil health, higher animal welfare
standards, public access to the countryside and measures to
reduce flooding.
This will replace the current subsidy system of Direct
Payments, which is ineffective and pays farmers based on the
total amount of land farmed. These payments are skewed towards
the largest landowners and are not linked to any specific public
benefits. The top 10% of recipients currently receive almost 50%
of total payments, while the bottom 20% receive just 2%.
In its place, a new Environmental Land Management system
will start from next year. The government will work together with
farmers to design, develop and trial the new approach. Under the
new system, farmers and land managers who provide the greatest
environmental benefits will secure the largest rewards, laying
the foundations for a Green Brexit.
The Bill will also be underpinned by measures to increase
productivity and invest in R&D.
For example, there will be funding available for farmers to
come together to develop and get the research projects that they
want and need, whether that be on soil health or sustainable
livestock farming . This will lead to practical gains for farmers
that help them become more profitable and reduce their
environmental footprint.
The government will also be able to make payments during
the seven year transition period for famers to invest in new
technologies and methods that boost productivity.
Environment Secretary said:
“The introduction of the Agriculture Bill is an historic
moment as we leave the EU and move towards a brighter future for
farming.
“After nearly 50 years of being tied to burdensome and
outdated EU rules, we have an opportunity to deliver a Green
Brexit.
“This Bill will allow us to reward farmers who protect our
environment, leaving the countryside in a cleaner, greener and
healthier state for future generations.
“Critically, we will also provide the smooth and gradual
transition that farmers and land managers need to plan ahead.”
Farmers will be supported over a seven year transition period as
we as leave the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP).
For 2019, Direct Payments will be made on the same basis as
now, subject to simplifications where possible. Direct Payments
for 2020 will also be made in much the same way as now.
Simplifications will be made as soon as possible, subject to the
terms of the overall Brexit implementation period. There will
then be an agricultural transition period in England between 2021
and 2027 as payments are gradually phased out.
During consultation, there was a widespread support for
applying reductions to Direct Payments more widely. Most farmers
will therefore see some reduction to their payments during the
transition, although those who receive the highest payments will
see bigger reductions initially. This will free up funds to
invest in public goods.
To help new entrants get into the sector and give farmers
flexibility to plan for the future, Direct Payments during the
agricultural transition period up until 2027 will be “delinked”
from the requirement to farm the land.
These payments, which may be calculated according to money
received in previous years, can be used by farmers to invest in
their business, diversify their activities or else retire from
farming and give way for new people to enter.
The Bill also sets out how the government will strengthen
transparency in the supply chain to help farmers get a better
deal in the marketplace.
By collecting data from across the supply chain, the
government will help food producers strengthen their negotiating
position at the farm gate and seek a fairer return.
The introduction of the Agriculture Bill now means that all
the necessary measures will be in place for the start of the
agricultural transition in 2021, delivering a smooth transition
to the new domestic policy.
ENDS
Notes to Editors:
- The Agriculture Bill sets the framework for Defra’s future
Environmental Land Management Policy, moving towards a system
where public money is spent on public goods, in particular
protecting and enhancing our environment. This will be the
centrepiece of the Government’s new approach to farm payments.
Public goods which the government will pay for include:
-
- Improving air and water quality and soil health – e.g.
reducing ammonia emissions or soil erosion
- Providing habitats for wildlife – e.g. maintaining hedgerows,
nectar plots for pollinators or food sources for farmland
birds
- Reducing flood risk – e.g. planting trees and hedges
- Preventing climate change – e.g. through peatland restoration
to protect the existing carbon store and reduce emissions of
CO2e
- Improving public access to our countryside – e.g. replacing
access structures such as gates
- Protecting iconic features of our countryside – e.g.
maintaining drystone walks or other historic features
- The agriculture sector currently imposes costs on the
environment. The annual external cost to farmers from soil
erosion and compaction from agriculture was estimated at £305m in
2010 for England and Wales (Defra analysis in £2017
prices using figures from Defra Science Project (2018)
/ total costs of soil degradation in England and
Wales (SP1606)).
- There are already examples where this ambitious environmental
focus for farmers is already working, such as the ‘Exmoor
Ambition’ – a post-Brexit plan for upland hill farming in the
region, developed by the Exmoor Hill Farming Network and Exmoor
National Park Authority.
- Agriculture policy is devolved, and so the Agriculture Bill
sets out primary legislation mostly for England. Following
close engagement with the devolved administrations the Bill will
provide powers for Welsh Government Ministers to pursue their own
reforms, and extend provisions to Northern Ireland, until primary
legislation is taken through their own legislatures. The Scottish
Government is not taking powers in the Bill.
- There will be some UK-wide clauses in the Bill for policies
reserved to the UK government. The UK government is
continuing discussions with the devolved administrations to find
common approaches for agriculture that work for all of the UK
where legislation is not required.
Timeline for the phasing out of Direct Payments and introduction
of the new system:
Year
|
CAP and CAP legacy
|
Future arrangements
|
Transitional Support
|
2019
|
Direct Paymentscontinue on the same basis
as now with minor simplifications
Countryside
Stewardship (CS)agreements
continue to be
signed and Higher
Level Stewardship (HLS)agreements extended as
required
|
Tests and trials for Environmental Land
Management (ELM)
|
|
2020
|
Direct Paymentscontinue with further
simplifications, where possible
CS agreements continue to be signed
and HLSagreements extended as
required
|
Tests and trials for ELM
Higher animal welfarestandard
defined, industry leadership role for animal
health and welfareagreed
|
|
2021
|
First year of progressive reductions to Direct
Payments
CS agreements continue to be signed
but number becomes dependent on ELM.
HLS agreements extended as required
|
First pilots and ongoing tests and trials
for ELM
Welfare pilots
begin and animal
healthinterventions agreed with industry
UK Shared Prosperity Fund starts
Targeted investment inR&D and
innovation
|
Transitional supportschemes to build farm
capability to manage risk, improve productivity and deliver
public goods will be offered, including:
- Enabling on-farm investment in equipment and
technology to deliver public goods
- Supporting new entrants to get into farming
- Measures to improve resilience - prevention of plant
pests and diseases
Initiatives to support new relationship between
government and land managers
|
2022-
2024
|
Progressive reductions to Direct
Payments continue
Final CS agreements start
(number dependent on ELM)
and HLSagreements extended as
required
|
ELM pilots, tests and trials.
Welfare pilots continue
and animal healthinterventions on
offer
Targeted investment inR&D and
innovation
|
2025
|
|
ELM fully up and running
Measures to promote animal health and
welfare fully up and running
Targeted investment inR&D and
innovation (up to 2029)
|
2026
|
|
2027
|
End of 7 year transition period (last
year Direct Payments)
|
2028
and
beyond
|
No Direct Payments
|
|
ENDS
NOT FOR REPORTING – FOR
BACKGROUND
AGRICULTURE BILL BRIEFING NOTE
Agricultural Transition: moving from the old system to
the new
Overall approach
- The system of agriculture support in England will start to
change as we move to a new system of land management contracts.
We will help the farming sector adapt to a post-Common
Agricultural Policy (CAP) world by phasing out Direct Payments
over a 7 year transition period, starting in 2021. This will free
up funding to reinvest into the delivery of public goods. We will
introduce the new land management system gradually, as part of a
planned and controlled transition.
Simplifying the CAP (2019 to 2020)
- We will pay Direct Payments for the 2019 scheme year on the
same basis as now. The EU rules for the Basic Payment Scheme,
greening and young farmer payment will apply throughout the whole
of 2019.
- We also plan to allocate the money paid in Direct Payments
for 2020 in much the same way that we do now. We will,
however, look to make simplifications to make it easier to apply
for and administer Direct Payments to increase value for
money. We will do this as soon as we can, and in line with
the terms of the implementation period.
- We will simplify the 2019 Countryside Stewardship application
process in England, within the rules of the implementation
period.
The Agricultural Transition (2021 to 2027)
- We will phase out Direct Payments in England, giving time for
farmers to adjust. We plan to start reducing payments in 2021. We
aim to phase out Direct Payments completely by the end of the
transition, with the last payments being made for the 2027 scheme
year.
- As Direct Payments are phased out, funds will be released so
that the new environmental land management contracts and other
measures to incentivise public goods can be introduced gradually.
During the transition we will also offer time-limited initiatives
that enable farmers to invest in equipment, technology, and
infrastructure that will help them to deliver public goods,
improve their productivity, and put them in a strong position to
take up offers through the new environmental land management
system.
- Simplified versions of Countryside Stewardship will continue
to be open to new applicants. We will also consider whether any
current Higher Level Scheme agreements should be extended. This
will be in parallel to the introduction of new environmental land
management contracts. This means that an established scheme will
continue to be available as we test and refine the new
arrangements.
- This approach will help farm businesses become increasingly
resilient, internationally competitive and better equipped to
protect our environment.
- From 2021, payment reductions will be applied in a fair way,
with higher reductions initially applied to amounts in higher
payment bands. For the first year of the transition, 2021,
we will reduce farmers’ Direct Payments by up to the following
percentages, which could free up to around £150m to reinvest into
the delivery of public goods - piloting new schemes, investing in
research & development and providing support for farmers
during the transition:
Direct Payment
band 1
|
Reduction
percentage
|
Up to £30,000
|
5%
|
£30,000 - £50,000
|
10%
|
£50,000 - £150,000
|
20%
|
£150,000 or more
|
25%
|
- These percentage reductions will be increased over the
transition until the final payments are made for the 2027 scheme
year. We will maintain the same cash total funding for the
sector until the end of this parliament, expected in 2022.
Delinking of Direct Payments
- To help new entrants get into the sector and give farmers
flexibility to plan for the future, Direct Payments will be
“delinked” from the requirement to farm the land. This will give
farmers much greater freedom over how they use the funding they
receive from Direct payments.
- Some farmers could use the money to invest in their business
without having to worry about the bureaucratic paperwork that
accompanies the Basic Payment Scheme. Others may choose to use
the money to diversify their activities or decide to stop farming
altogether and use the payment to contribute to their retirement.
It should increase the ease with which new entrants, and those
existing farmers wishing to expand, could acquire land.
- This approach best meets the widespread desire for
simplification. It gives farmers the greatest flexibility on how
they use the money received. We will also look to give farmers
the option of taking a one-off lump sum payment in place of all
their annual Direct Payments.
- Delinking will also remove the requirement to follow existing
EU rules, as well as the system of payment deductions that
enforces them. This change will help us to improve on some of the
more onerous and ineffective requirements in place today; but all
farmers must continue to comply with good land management and
husbandry standards. We are committed to maintaining a strong
regulatory baseline, with enforcement mechanisms that are
proportionate and effective. Alternative enforcement mechanisms
will be introduced before Direct Payments are delinked so that we
can maintain agricultural and environmental best practice.
Environmental land management
- As we phase out Direct Payments, we will invest in the
delivery of public goods. Improvements in soil health, water
quality, air quality, biodiversity and carbon reduction have the
potential to make us healthier, protect our natural capital,
tackle climate change and preserve our heritage and beautiful
landscapes.
- The government will work with farmers and land managers who
wish to improve the environment by entering
into environmental land management
contracts, which could span several years.
- These contracts will make sure that the environmental
benefits farmers help deliver, but which cannot be sold or
bought, are reimbursed by the public purse. These will include:
- Helping to deliver improved air and water quality;
- protecting and enhancing biodiversity on their land, by
providing habitats for wildlife,
- preventing, reducing and adapting to climate change and other
environmental hazards like flooding and drought;
- providing public access to their land and contributing to the
public’s understanding and enjoyment of nature; and
- protecting our historic rural environment and our distinctive
landscape features.
- These contracts will be based on a land
management plan developed by the farmer or land
manager. Farmers and land managers will be able to join the
scheme using a simple application
process throughout the year. They will be able
to decide for themselves how they can
deliver environmental benefits from their business and their
land, and how they integrate this into their food, timber or
other commercial activities.
- Plans will be adaptable and
encourage local solutions. They will be rooted in strong evidence
and best practice, encouraging farmers and land managers to
review and revise approaches throughout the year to deliver the
best results.
- Current agri-environment schemes base the return to the
farmer on the costs incurred and income foregone from the
delivery of environmental goods. We will explore how to encourage
greater participation where this may be needed to help deliver
our environmental aims, valuing environmental benefits
appropriately while respecting our international obligations and
ensuring we maximise value for money. Funding from the government
could comprise multi-annual payments, capital grants, and/or
payments for collaboration and for local engagement.
- We will work with potential participants
to design, test and trial
elements before piloting it widely and then rolling
it out nationally. We will implement the new scheme in phases.
This will allow for flexibility as we develop the scheme, and
enable us to deliver a system that is valued and participated in
by farmers and land managers.