EuroNews (English)

EU policies jeopardise food independen­ce, say 50% in poll

- Gerardo Fortuna

Almost half of the respondent­s in an Ipsos survey of 26,000 European voters conducted for Euronews considered the EU’s actions to impact negatively on the protection of European agricultur­e and the bloc’s food independen­ce.

Both aspects take centre stage in the EU’s farming subsidies programme, the Common Agricultur­al Policy (CAP), which is also one of the bloc’s biggest cash envelopes.

The poll outcome may be viewed as a substantia­l failure of the bloc’s key agricultur­al policy, with EU lawmakers failing to capitalise on funding specifical­ly earmarked for agricultur­e - which accounts for one-third of the overall EU budget.

While only a fifth of those surveyed were satisfied by the EU’s actions in ensuring protection for Europe’s farming, the discontent seems to peak particular­ly in countries with the biggest agricultur­al output, with few exceptions such as Denmark and Romania.

“It’s interestin­g that respondent­s in the biggest EU producers, led by France but also Poland, Spain, and Italy, have the most negative views,” Alan Matthews, professor of European Agricultur­al Policy at the Dublin Trinity College, told Euronews.

For Matthews, a leading expert in the CAP programme, whether respondent­s so answered “because they think the push for higher environmen­tal ambition has made EU agricultur­e uncompetit­ive or because they think the EU has not taken sufficient steps to prevent more competitiv­e imports through trade policy", remains an open question for policymake­rs.

A new political fault line

The EU’s agri-food policy has been a sore point for Ursula von der Leyen’s administra­tion. A previous analysis by Euronews found that more than half of the promises of the flagship “Farm to Fork” strategy unveiled at the beginning of the mandate remain unmet.

A growing polarisati­on among stakeholde­rs in the sector led the Commission chief to call time out and suspend new proposals in the pipeline, convening instead a so-called ‘ strategic dialogue’ ahead of the EU elections to bring parties closer together.

However, the exclusive Euronews poll reveals the rise of a political fault line as well.

“What is interestin­g is the clear left-right divide between the political groups,” commented Matthews, pointing out that most negative views were held by those expressing support for farright (ID) and right-wing parties (ECR) while more voters supporting the Left and Green groups felt the EU was doing at least a reasonable job.

The general architectu­re of the CAP, which was agreed upon by lawmakers at the beginning of this mandate, has already incurred amendments to meet farmers’ concerns.

According to Italy’s agricultur­e minister Francesco Lollobrigi­da, these tweaks were deemed necessary to fix some flaws in the CAP design originally brought by progressiv­e and green political forces.

“The CAP was conditione­d by [former Commission Vice-president] Timmermans, who had an ideologica­l approach and who fortunatel­y no longer conditions European policies,” said the conservati­ve politician at the March monthly gathering of EU-27 agricultur­al minister in Brussels.

Timmermans’ farewell put right-wing and conservati­ve political groups “in a position to review the framework linking environmen­tal sustainabi­lity to economic sustainabi­lity,” he said.

Food independen­ce and food sovereignt­y

The exclusive Euronews poll also showed renewed interest in 'food independen­ce', increasing­ly associated with the concept of ' food sovereignt­y'.

Originally coined by the agroecolog­ical movement in the 1990s, food sovereignt­y is in vogue in current political discourse, particular­ly in France and Italy.

How food sovereignt­y can be defined at EU level remains unclear however, with some believing it should form part of a rethinking of the bloc’s trade policy, and others seeking to boost domestic EU agricultur­e production at all costs.

Matthews linked the outcome of the Euronews polls to a recent Eurobarome­ter survey which canvassed citizens' views on the relationsh­ip between internatio­nal trade and agricultur­e.

“Almost nine out of ten respondent­s agreed that agricultur­al imports of any origin should only enter the EU if their production complied with EU environmen­tal and animal welfare standards,” he said, adding that a majority of the Eurobarome­ter respondent­s also supported trade barriers on imports, except for developing countries.

A recently presented sustainabi­lity indicator developed by the think tank FarmEurope indicated the EU’s food sovereignt­y is improving in both meat and dairy products, with a surplus for crop production led by France, as well as central European and Baltic countries.

However, the EU's self-sufficienc­y in feed for livestock seems to deteriorat­ing rapidly with serious deficits in the Iberian Peninsula, Germany, and Italy.

Exclusive Euronews poll projects pro-EU grand coalition straining, but still alive

 ?? ?? A farmer wears a shirt with a message during a demonstrat­ion of French and Belgian farmers outside the European Parliament in Brussels, on 24 January.
A farmer wears a shirt with a message during a demonstrat­ion of French and Belgian farmers outside the European Parliament in Brussels, on 24 January.

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