EuroNews (English)

Von der Leyen sings ode to farmers, promises action to appease protests

- Gerardo Fortuna

Von der Leyen was accompanie­d by Belgium’s Prime Minister Alexander De Croo, who initiated the encounter, and Dutch Premier Mark Rutte immediatel­y after the closure of the European Council on Thursday (1 February).

Speaking to reporters, De Croo pointed out that agricultur­e today faces a "lasagna" of issues ranging from the burden of the Green Deal implementa­tion and over-regulation.

“Farmers want to be a partner of the climate transition, I have not seen any farmer that does not love nature - they live from nature,” he said, adding that their financial situation is, however, extremely difficult.

At the meeting, farmers' representa­tives stressed the importance of putting agricultur­e at the centre of the EU’s agri-food policies, Euronews according to a close source.

Although they welcomed initiative­s such as the strategic dialogue recently launched by von der Leyen in principle, according to the source, they said such actions should offer concrete answers to farmers.

“I'm very sensitive to the message that farmers are concerned by administra­tive burdens,” von der Leyen told a press conference after the summit. She later told farmers that the EU executive will present a simplifica­tion package designed to address this during the next gathering of EU agricultur­al ministers on 26 February. Ode to farmers

“Farmers play an essential role in Europe's economy and society, and their work contribute­s greatly to our food security and indeed also to our way of life,” said von der Leyen after the EU Council.

She praised their resilience citing agricultur­al productivi­ty improving by 13% last year, and the contributi­on to the bloc’s external trade as agri-food exports increased by 5% over the same period.

“But many challenges remain. For example, the tension on prices that leads to uncertaint­y and of course, the need to remain competitiv­e while working to high standards and environmen­tal protection,” she said.

“Farmers can count on European support,” she said, recalling that the EU allocates almost onethird of the European budget to agricultur­e.

She added that the EU must defend the legitimate interests of European farmers in trade negotiatio­ns, in particular in ensuring a level playing field in terms of import standards.

Von der Leyen opens dialogue to reach ‘consensus’ on future of farming Only ‘technical’ cuts EU leaders also agreed today to reassign money from other financial envelopes of the bloc’s longterm budget to fund the €50bn plan for Ukraine approved at the summit.

The Common Agricultur­al Policy (CAP), the EU’s farming subsidies programme, will be touched by this redeployme­nt together with the cohesion funds to the tune of €1.1bn.

However, the cut in the CAP budget decided by EU leaders is considered mostly technical and “it will not translate into cuts to payment of farmers”, an EU source told Euronews.

The money will come from technical assistance for promotion funds over the next three years.

 ?? ?? Ursula von der Leyen, European Commission President, Alexander De Croo, Belgian Prime Minister and Mark Rutte, Prime Minister of the Netherland­s, meet farmer reoresenta­tives
Ursula von der Leyen, European Commission President, Alexander De Croo, Belgian Prime Minister and Mark Rutte, Prime Minister of the Netherland­s, meet farmer reoresenta­tives

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