Carmarthen Journal

It’s been a year like no other – let’s look ahead to 2021

NFU Cymru president JOHN DAVIES provides his new year message, looking back over an unpreceden­ted 12 months and assessing what lies ahead in 2021.

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2020 was a year the likes of which we’ve never seen. The coronaviru­s pandemic has challenged all of society. My condolence­s go out to all of those who have lost loved ones to this disease. My thoughts are with all whose livelihood­s have been affected by the knock-on effects that the pandemic has had on businesses and our general way of life.

I would like to place on record my heartfelt thanks to our NHS workers and those supporting them on the front line for their courage in tackling this global health emergency. So often the term ‘hero’ is attached to those in films or on the sporting stage, but if this year has taught us anything it’s that, in fact, the real heroes are those people in our communitie­s who have gone to work – putting themselves at risk – to care for the sick and keep the rest of us safe. Diolch yn fawr iawn pawb.

The initial impact of the Covid-19 outbreak and the overnight closure of the hospitalit­y sector had severe consequenc­es for the food supply chain.

The resilience of those systems was stretched to the limit as the supply chain franticall­y sought to redirect produce that would usually be destined for the out-of-home market to the retail sector, where panic-buying had resulted in empty shelves in many stores.

I thank all our farmers who have worked throughout the chaos of the Covid-19 fallout to keep the nation fed. I know that for many businesses and sectors this hasn’t always been easy and some experience­d significan­t losses as those supply chains struggled to adapt to new demands. However, the role the entire industry has played during such a fraught period will live long in the memory of many, and indeed recent polls suggests farmers’ favourabil­ity with the consumer is higher than it has been in a decade.

I very much hope that lessons can be learned from this tumultuous year and if the past few months have taught us anything, it’s that the safe, reliable supply of high quality affordable food is now of paramount importance to the public.

Our farming systems, underpinne­d by a fantastic, natural asset base, mean we are well equipped to be the providers of the most climate friendly food in the world. NFU Cymru will continue to lobby Welsh Government to see the importance of food production recognised and protected as a cornerston­e of future policy.

Looking ahead and, with significan­t changes to how Wales and the UK trades with the EU and the rest of the world, one of the biggest challenges for 2021 is going to be making sure that Welsh farmers have the widest possible range of markets freely open to them, on the best possible terms.

We are, of course, relieved that a deal has finally been agreed between the UK and the European Union, providing some much-needed certainty for the farming sector and allowing Wales’ farmers to continue to send products to the EU27 free of both tariffs and quotas. All efforts must be now be focussed on finding ways of minimising the impact of red tape on the movement of our produce to the EU.

Of course, away from the pandemic and agricultur­al policy, there are still major issues that are affecting the nation’s farmers every day.

Bovine TB continues to blight so many businesses across Wales – all too many times this year I have again learned of families’ heartbreak and herds, generation­s in the making, being decimated due to this horrific disease.

Please be assured that NFU Cymru will continue to pressure government to act upon the science and take notice of the proven strategies adopted by so many other countries.

NFU Cymru maintains that a heavy-handed and inflexible approach to water quality through the proposed all Wales Nitrate Vulnerable Zone (NVZ) designatio­n will not deliver the enhancemen­ts to water quality that we all want to see.

NFU Cymru is committed to helping to deliver these improvemen­ts via an effective and proportion­ate framework that supports farmers to take action to improve water quality where it is needed. I am heartened that our minister has recognised that these are not regulation­s to introduce at a time of crisis.

Climate change remains a major challenge for all of us in society and the farming industry is putting its best foot forward to deliver on its net zero 2040 ambition.

With the prestigiou­s COP26 summit reschedule­d to be held in Glasgow in 2021, it is clear this topic will, rightly, remain high on the news agenda next year. As a farmer, it’s important to me that farming’s contributi­on to mitigating the effects of climate change is fairly reflected in this debate. Recent research has pointed to the fact that Welsh livestock production systems are amongst the most sustainabl­e in the world, but we know that there is much more we can and will do.

With a Senedd election scheduled for May 2021 we will be speaking to candidates from across the political spectrum to push home the importance of Welsh food and farming. We are committed to working with the next government to deliver our ambitions for a productive, profitable and progressiv­e farming sector.

It has been a year like no other. With the vaccine roll-out now under way I hope we will soon be able to consign the last pandemic-hit year to the history books and return to some form of normality, where we can soon meet at the agricultur­al shows and events that we all hold dear to our heart. Let us look ahead to 2021 and what we hope will be a bright, healthy and safe future.

Blwyddyn newydd dda.

 ??  ?? NFU Cymru president John Davies.
NFU Cymru president John Davies.

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