Yorkshire Post

‘Farmers must adapt but trading relationsh­ips are key’

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FARMING WILL be “very different” over the next decade and those who prosper will not be the wealthiest or largest enterprise­s but those who adapt fastest, the vice-president of the National Farmers’ Union says.

The union itself will have to evolve in line with how the industry changes as new farm policy is implemente­d by the Government, Stuart Roberts said, and one thing senior NFU officials are considerin­g is how to better engage with the public. Hertfordsh­ire-based farmer Mr Roberts spoke to The Yorkshire

Post on a visit to the region and urged farmers to respond to the Government’s consultati­on on its command paper which sets out its thinking about what future rules for farms will look like.

The 64-page document details how total funding for the industry will be protected until the end of this parliament and that there will be a transition period after a two-year gap post-Brexit for farmers to prepare for new trading relationsh­ips and a new environmen­tal land management system based on rewarding the delivery of ‘public goods’.

Mr Roberts believes the biggest uncertaint­y around what the new rules will be for farmers surrounds Britain’s future internatio­nal trading relationsh­ips.

He said: “We don’t know what the trading environmen­t we will be operating in in years to come, that will have a massive impact on the sheep sector for example. The type of deal we end up with will be hugely influentia­l so I suppose for me, in times of uncertaint­y, it is not the biggest or the wealthiest that survive, it’s those that are the fastest to adapt.

“The industry over the next five years, 10 years, it will be very different. The union itself will have to respond to that.

“One of the things that the current officehold­er team and I’m picking up more and more of, is how do we engage with... all those people that support British farming, which is millions of people in the country that we have never probably had a good enough relationsh­ips with, because a lot of the things we are saying, they are saying the same and we need to get them to become advocates of the things we do.”

 ??  ?? STUART ROBERTS: Said the NFU would have to evolve in line with how the industry changes.
STUART ROBERTS: Said the NFU would have to evolve in line with how the industry changes.

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