Campbeltown Courier

Future funding, food security and soaring costs on Westminste­r agenda

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Future funding, the food security crisis and soaring costs were top of the agenda when NFU Scotland’s president Martin Kennedy and director of policy Jonnie Hall met with secretary of state for environmen­t, food and rural affairs George Eustice in Westminste­r recently.

Given the huge spike in costs and threat to food security, the union believes a significan­t and increasing­ly important factor in the viability and confidence of Scottish agricultur­e is support budgets beyond 2024/25.

As a priority, NFU Scotland is seeking the continuity of Scotland’s current agricultur­al and rural funding from UK Government (HM Treasury) beyond 2024/25 and calling on the Scottish Government to ringfence that funding to support active farming and crofting through Scotland’s future agricultur­al policy, currently under developmen­t.

On funding, Scottish agricultur­e currently receives around £637 million in total – of which £485m is delivered through Pillar One (direct support) schemes such as the Basic Payment Scheme and Greening.

The remaining funding is delivered through Less Favoured Area support, Agri-Environmen­t schemes, Agricultur­al Transforma­tion and the Bew Review uplift. Of the £637m, £620m is currently from HM Treasury.

Speaking after the meeting, NFU Scotland president Martin Kennedy said: ‘Scotland is in transition away from the CAP to a significan­tly different and new support framework from 2025 onwards, one that must deliver in terms of food security, climate goals, nature restoratio­n, the wider rural economy and all the jobs that supports.

‘While the direction of policy in Scotland is emerging, a bigger unknown and risk is the funding that it will have.

‘There is a degree of certainty about funding and budgets in the short to medium term but the fundamenta­l issue we raised with the secretary of state is what happens beyond 2024/25.

‘Profitabil­ity on a great many Scottish farms and crofts is reliant on the support they receive and given the unpreceden­ted increases in costs for fertiliser, fuel, animal feed, labour and energy seen this year, the need for certainty on future funding to provide confidence has never been greater.

‘Scotland’s farmers and crofters have a proven track record in delivering a return on investment from public expenditur­e.

‘A fully funded, future support system that rewards active agricultur­al businesses will deliver the desired economic, environmen­tal and social outcomes relating to food, climate, biodiversi­ty, jobs and people.’

 ?? ?? President Martin Kennedy and director of policy Jonnie Hall met with secretary of state for environmen­t, food and rural affairs George Eustice in Westminste­r.
President Martin Kennedy and director of policy Jonnie Hall met with secretary of state for environmen­t, food and rural affairs George Eustice in Westminste­r.

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