The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Minister wants livelihood­s at the heart of post-CAP debate

SEMINAR: Potential pitfalls of post-Brexit landscape explored

- NANCY NICOLSON FARMING EDITOR

Farming industry leaders were yesterday warned not to forget the importance of rural livelihood­s when they consider new frameworks to replace the Common Agricultur­al Policy.

At the end of an Edinburgh seminar outlining policy options post-2019, the Scottish Government’s Brexit Minister, Mike Russell, told leaders to “go on imagining the possibilit­ies”, but focus on people’s livelihood­s.

Mr Russell also urged academics and representa­tives of key farming, forestry and environmen­tal organisati­ons to remember the debate should be about an entire rural policy, not just agricultur­al priorities. And he flagged up the need to consider trade issues and why regulatory systems exist.

The Minister’s contributi­on came at the end of a session at Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC) seminar which had been dominated by warnings from senior agricultur­al economists and consultant­s about the complexity of unpicking EU regulation­s and formulatin­g a new replacemen­t policy for the food and farming industry.

SRUC’s senior agricultur­al economist, Steven Thomson, warned any new agricultur­al budget would have to be justified to taxpayers and an often sceptical press.

“Currently it’s easy to just say it’s a European decision, they decide where the money goes,” he said.

“There is a good case to be made but any farmers still regarding their payments as a right should think again.”

Mr Thomson also urged Scottish farmers to think seriously about what life will be like without the support of the French who were largely responsibl­e for safeguardi­ng the current CAP budget.

“The UK position was to slash the budget and we have to acknowledg­e that,” he said.

Kev Bevan, a senior business analyst with SAC Consulting, said many conversati­ons that farmers were having about alternativ­e Scottish or UK payment regimes failed to take account of possible new trading rules.

“Whether it is soft Brexit or hard Brexit we will still need to comply with EU rules to access EU markets,” he said.

“A hard Brexit and membership of the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) promises heavy tariffs on grain and meat exports to the EU. The WTO also has rigid rules against payments to producers that are coupled to production.”

Policy specialist Andrew Moxey of Pareto Consulting said rather than direct support, money could fund capital expenditur­e grants for diversific­ation and business restructur­ing and advice.

nnicolson@thecourier.co.uk

 ??  ?? Mike Russell is the Scottish Government’s Brexit Minister.
Mike Russell is the Scottish Government’s Brexit Minister.

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