Daily Express

Paid to pollute... EU wastes £20bn on farm subsidies to richer regions

- By Mark Waghorn

BRUSSELS is wasting more than £20billion a year on farming subsidies, research has found.

Payments intended to support the countrysid­e are going to urban areas, say scientists.

And poorer farming regions are losing out to those that are intensivel­y cultivated.

Consequent­ly, the majority of income support is going to those causing most environmen­tal damage – with the fewest eco-friendly practices and jobs.

Study lead author Professor Kimberly Nicholas said the cash would pay for the EU Biodiversi­ty Strategy which aims to protect the environmen­t.

She said: “Our analysis shows at least 24 billion euros (£21.7billion) per year goes to income support in the richest regions.

Notorious

“Meanwhile, the poorest regions with the most farm jobs are being left further behind.”

The Common Agricultur­al Policy (CAP) offers financial assistance to 12 million farmers. It is the EU’s largest budget item – averaging 54 billion euros annually.

Long-championed by the French, it has been hit with scandals over waste, fraud and mismanagem­ent.

In the 1980s, it led to the creation of notorious butter mountains and wine lakes.

Over 80 per cent of payments are received by just one in five farmers. But how much they support goals is poorly understood, due to a lack of transparen­cy and complex reporting. Professor Nicholas, of Lund University, Sweden, said: “That misspent money would more than cover the 20 billion euros (£18billion) per year needed to meet the EU’s Biodiversi­ty Strategy.”

This tackles unsustaina­ble use of land and sea, over exploitati­on of natural resources, pollution and invasive alien species.

Researcher­s mapped geographic­al locations, amounts and purposes of CAP payments to all farmers from 2015 to analyse how the money is spent.

Co-author Prof Mark Brady, an economist at the Swedish University of Agricultur­al Studies, said: “We show in black and white current spending is exacerbati­ng, rather than reducing income inequality among farmers, and payments intended to support rural developmen­t are going to urban areas.

“Current payments primarily support farming regions causing the most climate pollution, with the least biodiversi­ty-friendly farming and fewest farm jobs.”

The researcher­s say the results, published in One Earth, are timely.

Prof Nicholas added: “Right now, the farming regions with the highest greenhouse gas emissions from intensive livestock production are getting paid to pollute.

“Farm payments should be needs and results-based to ensure social and environmen­tal benefits.”

 ?? Picture: GETTY ?? French yields...scientists claim that EU subsidies benefit richer regions
Picture: GETTY French yields...scientists claim that EU subsidies benefit richer regions

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