Irish Independent - Farming

Hill farmers call for direct payments to be front-loaded

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FRONT-LOADING of Pillar 1 payments and increased national exchequer backing for Pillar 2 were the primary demands made by the Irish Natura and Hill Farmers Associatio­n (INHFA) at their National Rally held in Westport on Friday night.

The hill farmer body claimed that the last CAP reforms had delivered just “minimal redistribu­tion” in Pillar 1 supports and frontloade­d payments on the first 20ha were required to ensure a more equitable distributi­on of supports.

The 500 farmers in attendance heard the INHFA call for a digressive f lat-rate payment on all eligible lands above 20ha, with payments to individual applicants capped at €60,000.

The INHFA also called for the suggested Eco Scheme measure — which is part of Pillar 1 in the current CAP reform proposals — to be mandatory at both Member State and farmer level.

The Eco Scheme should account for 30pc of farmers’ Pillar 1 payments, the meeting was told, and be paid at a f latrate payment of €75/ha from 2020.

With regard to the make-up of the Eco Scheme, the INHFA is recommendi­ng that it should involve the measuremen­t of each farm’s carbon footprint and also provide for a suite of suitable actions for extensive and intensive farming systems.

The INHFA called on the Government to honour its commitment to provide additional funding and ensure the overall Pillar 2 pot exceeded €650m.

The organisati­on said an additional €80m should be targeted at the ANC scheme, with increased payments for lands with the highest level of constraint.

A farm retirement scheme to help in generation­al renewal that starts at 60 and pays €400/week was also sought.

“These proposals, if implemente­d, will deliver better outcomes for the vast majority of farmers,” said INHFA president Colm O’Donnell.

There was broad support for the capping of payments from the political representa­tives in attendance. Charlie McConalogu­e of Fianna Fáil and Independen­t MEP Marian Harkin said the €60,000 limit should be adopted.

Defining moment

Independen­t TD Michael Fitzmauric­e described the CAP reforms as a “defining moment” for many smaller farms. He said targeting overall payments of €20,000 at holdings of 20-30ha had to be a priority to ensure the survival of these units.

Mr Fitzmauric­e warned that making the west of Ireland a carbon sink for the rest of the country by planting large tracts of marginal land was not an approach that communitie­s would accept.

Meanwhile, MEP Luke ‘Ming’ Flanagan claimed that the EU’s priorities had “moved from a Common Agricultur­e Policy to a Common Defence Policy” following the recent migrant crisis which had led to the formation of 10,000-strong frontier protection force.

The Roscommon-based MEP admitted to being conf licted at suggestion­s of greater national government input into CAP policy.

Divesting more power from Brussels was generally a good idea, he said, but he cautioned that such a move could see a lot more farmers “losing out” because of decisions taken locally.

Marian Harkin told the meeting that granting national government­s a greater say on CAP policy and funding may not be approved by the European Parliament.

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