Yorkshire Post

Testing farming’s ‘green blueprint’

Dales farms try Government scheme – with money for environmen­tal benefits replacing EU subsidies

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david.behrens@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IT MAY seem like an exercise in counting flowers, but a trial currently under way deep within the Yorkshire Dales might soon help redefine the balance between farming and the environmen­t.

A world away from the corridors of Whitehall, where the Government’s “green blueprint” for the future of agricultur­e was drawn up two years ago, farmers on the ground are beginning to put its proposals into practice.

The ambition to reward landowners for delivering environmen­tal benefits such as flood prevention, habitats for wildlife and improved public access to the countrysid­e was to be the legacy of Brexit, as laid out by the former Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove.

His “payments for public goods” would replace what he called the “burdensome and outdated” subsidies of the EU.

It’s made the farm profitable... and enhanced the land Stephen Bostock who runs Hall Farm, in Gammersgil­l, on the trial scheme.

Currently, the touchstone for his new landscape is the hamlet of Gammersgil­l, east of Buckden and south of Aysgarth, where Stephen Bostock runs Hall Farm and officials from the Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority gathered to assess progress on what in official parlance is the Results-Based Agri-environmen­t Payment Scheme.

Wensleydal­e and Coverdale are the only places in England that are currently allowing farmers to conduct their own assessment of the environmen­tal benefits they have put in place, and to be paid by results.

Helen Keep, a senior farm conservati­on officer at the park authority, said 19 farmers, most with hay meadows or land for breeding waders such as curlew, lapwing and snipe, were taking part in the project – which for the first time gives them complete flexibilit­y on how to manage their land. The aim is to cultivate wildflower meadows rich in declining species and havens for birds whose population­s have fallen as their habitats have not been maintained.

Each farmer is required to fill out a “score sheet” for different species of wildflower and features known to provide good conditions for breeding waders, Positive and negative points are recorded, giving each meadow a total score – with higher scores triggering bigger payments. Ms Keep said the selfassess­ment scheme could be a long-term replacemen­t for the more prescripti­ve countrysid­e stewardshi­p model. “Administra­tively it could be a game changer,” she said. “It allows farmers to manage their habitat as they see fit, to achieve improvemen­ts. They are helped and advised and then left to their own devices. They do the work and the self assessment, and we come along and verify them.”

She had gone to Mr Bostock’s farm, where a meadow is being used for “control” purposes, to compare results with the old stewardshi­p system.

Payments for environmen­tal benefits had been “a lifesaver” for family farmers, he said.

“It’s made the farm profitable, it’s been a good source of income and also enhanced the land for the environmen­t,” he added.

 ?? PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY ?? BLOOMING GOOD IDEA?: Left, Helen Keep, from the Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority, among wild flowers growing in this traditiona­l hay meadow; above, farmer Stephen Bostock; below, a harebell and dried grass for silage.
PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY BLOOMING GOOD IDEA?: Left, Helen Keep, from the Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority, among wild flowers growing in this traditiona­l hay meadow; above, farmer Stephen Bostock; below, a harebell and dried grass for silage.
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