The Pembrokeshire Herald

NFU Cymru requests to meet with new First Minister

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NFU Cymru has offered its congratula­tions to the new First Minister Vaughan Gething MS and has reiterated the union’s commitment to working with the First Minister and his government to offer solutions that benefit farmers, Welsh Government and the people of Wales.

NFU Cymru President Aled Jones has written to the new First Minister Vaughan Gething MS to request an urgent meeting to discuss in-person the numerous pressing challenges currently affecting Welsh farming, as well as the opportunit­y to outline the sector’s ambitions for the future.

Speaking after Vaughan Gething MS was formally announced as the new First Minister of Wales on Wednesday 20th March, NFU Cymru President Aled Jones said: “I offer my congratula­tions to Vaughan Gething MS on his appointmen­t as Wales’ new First Minister.

“Wales’ farmers are very proud to provide the raw ingredient­s that underpin our £8.1 billion food and drink sector, which is also Wales’ largest employer, providing jobs for some 233,500 people. As farmers we are also hugely ambitious to not only produce more food for our own domestic market in Wales and across the UK, but also to see more Welsh food and drink sold around the world.

“NFU Cymru’s vision is for a productive, profitable and progressiv­e farming sector producing world renowned climate friendly food in an environmen­t and landscape that provides habitats for our nature to thrive. We believe that Welsh food and farming can deliver economic, environmen­tal, cultural, and social benefits for all the people of Wales whilst meeting our ambition for net zero agricultur­e by 2040.

“Despite this and the considerab­le ambition NFU Cymru has for Welsh agricultur­e, the sector of the economy which I represent is facing some very considerab­le challenges at the moment. There is frustratio­n and despair around the proposals contained in the Sustainabl­e Farming Scheme consultati­on, which is in need of a major overhaul, as well as the administra­tive and cost requiremen­ts of complying with Welsh Government regulation­s around water quality and the emotional impact and financial burden caused by bovine TB. The cumulation of these factors and the emotional and financial stresses which accompanie­s them has contribute­d to a sense of anxiety and indeed turmoil in our rural communitie­s, something which has manifested itself in the recent farmer rallies and demonstrat­ions. It is against this backdrop of an industry which is in a state of considerab­le upheaval, that I have requested an urgent meeting with the new First Minister in order to discuss the issues which the sector is currently facing.

“I am very much of the view that it is only through dialogue and genuine partnershi­p working that we can try and work our way through some of the difficulti­es farming and government face in order to arrive at solutions which work for farmers, for Welsh Government and for the public. By working together, I am confident that we can deliver what we need in order to secure the future of our rural communitie­s, maintain and uphold our high standards of production, properly recognise the strategic importance of domestic primary production and the manufactur­ing base it underpins, as well as ensuring a secure supply of healthy, affordable food.”

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