The NFU is urging MPs to ask how the government intends to honour
its manifesto pledge that British farming’s high environmental and
animal welfare standards will not be undermined in future trade
policy, as the Trade Bill begins its passage in the House of
Commons today (Wednesday).
The NFU is also continuing to press the importance of a
Trade, Food and Farming Standards Commission – a body which would
review policy and develop solutions to promote free trade while
holding all food imports to the UK’s high food standards.
The call comes after the Agriculture Bill was passed into
the House of Lords unamended last week, despite widespread
support from the farming industry, environmental and animal
welfare NGOs and MPs for changes that would ensure food imports
in any future trade deals meet the same high production standards
that are legally required of UK farmers.
NFU President Minette Batters said: “As the Trade Bill is
debated for the first time in the House of Commons today, I ask
MPs to consider one thing – where do they see the UK on the
global stage?
“For food and farming, we have the potential to be at the
very top. But we need a trade policy that safeguards our farmers
and British food production from the damaging impact of importing
food that would be illegal to produce here. Failure to do this
would undermine our values of animal welfare, environmental
protection and food safety, all of which are incredibly important
to the public.
“Last week we heard MPs say that the standards of imported
food was an issue for the Trade Bill rather than the Agriculture
Bill. With this in mind, I hope to see it fully addressed today.
I would also like to know why the government has not yet
established a trade and standards commission. It would be an
eminently sensible approach aimed at addressing the many complex
challenges in ensuring our high production standards are
safeguarded within our future trade policy.
“Our trade policy must reflect our
moral responsibilities to the planet and the
people and creatures that live on it – protecting our natural
environment, caring for our farmed animals, and working toward a
more sustainable, climate-friendly way of farming and food
production. These are issues that cannot be
wished away or presumed dealt with by brief pledges in a
manifesto or verbal assurances in media interviews.
“So I ask all MPs to speak up for British farming today;
ask for a commission that will protect the UK’s food values from
sub-standard imports and ask for more parliamentary scrutiny over
future trade deals.
“We are at a make or break moment for British farming. We
have the chance to become a global leader
in climate-friendly farming, and neither
farmers nor the public want to see that ambition fall by the
wayside because our trade policy does not hold food imports to
the same standards as are expected of our own farmers.”