The Scotsman

Map warning from EU auditors

- By BRIAN HENDERSON bhenderson@farming.co.uk

The Eu-wide systems for mapping and identifyin­g farm fields eligible for subsidy might be helping to reduce the number of errors in support payments to farmers – but there is room for improvemen­t, the European Court of Auditors (ECA) warned in a report published yesterday.

And Scotland was criticised for using aerial and satellite imagery which could be out of date and for “significan­t delays” in updating mapping imagery, due to time pressure on staff, when the Land Parcel Identifica­tion Systems (LPIS) used to assess enti- tlements under the common agricultur­al policy was scrutinise­d by the ECA.

The auditors visited Austria, Germany (Saarland and North Rhine-westphalia), Ireland, Poland and the UK (Scotland) – and stressed in their report that reliable and up-todate data was essential to ensure payments were legal and regular.

However, while the imagery used should be renewed every three to five years, it found that some of that used in Scotland dated back to 2008 – and the auditors estimated that 6.9 per cent of the total had been photograph­ed before 2010.

The report also found that ineligible areas had alsobeenre­gisteredas­land parcels eligible for CAP payments. These included rocky areas and steep slopes without green cover, and woodlands claimed for as grazed areas, which visits to the area revealed weren’t grazeable.

But the Scottish authoritie­s also gained praise from the auditors for good practice in ensuring that any new parcels, changes in ownership or the right to claim on land parcels were supported by background documentat­ion, signed by all parties in the exchange

The report also concluded that while Member States had made progress, the systems had not yet been fully adapted for greening.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom