The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

NFUS unveils its own vision for agricultur­al policy after Brexit

Union blueprint outlines ‘Steps to change’ that would replace CAP

- NANCY NICOLSON FARMING EDITOR nnicolson@thecourier.co.uk

Scotland’s farming leaders yesterday relished the prospect of finally being free of the shackles of the Common Agricultur­al Policy (CAP) as they marked the 365-day countdown to Brexit with the launch of an alternativ­e blueprint for agricultur­e.

With the clock ticking to the UK’s exit from the EU, NFU Scotland (NFUS) laid its cards on the table with a “Steps to change” document that overhauls 45 years of often derided European support measures and focuses instead on financial stability, productivi­ty and the environmen­t.

However, under their plans, the union acknowledg­ed that British taxpayers would still be required to fund the industry to the same level of support as it currently receives until at least 2027, in order to give farmers enough time to adjust to new policies, emerging trade deals and improvemen­ts in the food and drink supply chain.

The union outlined a support structure which its leaders believed would make the industry more competitiv­e, resilient and profitable, but NFUS director of policy, Jonnie Hall said: “Leaving the EU and the CAP is like turning around a supertanke­r, you can’t just apply the handbrake and do a donut.”

He said it was time to collapse the two pillars of the CAP and move away from area-based payments to build a “tiered” approach to farm support.

At its base there would be financial stability payments which would be subject to cross-compliance requiremen­ts, together with some non-competitiv­e productivi­ty and environmen­tal measures which would be tailored to reflect varying farming systems and which would deliver productivi­ty gains and environmen­tal benefits “in the right places”.

Competitiv­e productivi­ty and environmen­tal measures would make up a third tier of support and the union envisages these would be available to farmers and crofters who wanted to become more competitiv­e or were aiming for even more positive environmen­tal outcomes.

The policy envisages the financial stability payments declining between 2022 and 2027 as farmers get rewarded for more production and environmen­tal action.

Union president Andrew McCornick said past EU policy had “incentivis­ed inertia” in the industry while a new approach to financial stability needed to be built on agricultur­al activity, rather than the simple occupation of land.

Copies of the policy document, “Steps to change: A new agricultur­al policy for Scotland”, were delivered to Rural Economy Secretary Fergus Ewing and other politician­s at Holyrood and Westminste­r.

Leaving the EU and the CAP is like turning around a supertanke­r, you can’t just apply the handbrake and do a donut. JONNIE HALL NFUS DIRECTOR OF POLICY

 ??  ?? From left: NFUS vice-president Martin Kennedy, Rural Economy Secretary Fergus Ewing and NFUS president Andrew McCornick with copies of the “Steps to change” policy document.
From left: NFUS vice-president Martin Kennedy, Rural Economy Secretary Fergus Ewing and NFUS president Andrew McCornick with copies of the “Steps to change” policy document.

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