Sligo Weekender

ICMSA president: We need to insist on an exception

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ICMSA president Pat McCormack says that the Irish family farm model would be critically undermined under the proposed CAP deal and Ireland will have to insist that member states are “given the necessary flexibilit­y to address country-specific issues in any final deal, if we are to avoid that scenario”. He said that ICMSA made a specific proposal to Agricultur­e Minster Charlie McConalogu­e whereby farmers under a defined level of payment are exempted from convergenc­e. “Convergenc­e is a very crude policy that will severely hit many farmers with a high payment per hectare but low overall payment.

“Everyone agrees that it doesn’t suit the Irish model and a solution has to be found to this problem. “We think that much confusion and unfairness can be avoided if we start at the principle of no cuts to any farmer receiving direct payments under Pillar I at a level to be agreed by Member States as part of the CAP Strategic plan.

“We think that should be our operating principle and that should guide our support or rejection of any new CAP,” said Mr McCormack in a recent statement.

The ICMSA president said that concentrat­ion on payment-per-hectare is pointless and misleading and that the focus should be concentrat­ing on total direct payments to an individual farmer.

“Our position, and what we think Ireland’s position should be, is that the new CAP must either set out in the agreement or allow individual member states the flexibilit­y to leave payments under Pillar I at a level agreed at member state level untouched. “Bluntly, we think that principle must take priority over convergenc­e,” said Mr McCormack. In relation to Ecoschemes, he said that ICMSA considered they operated as “a deduction from farmers and the rural economy”.

“The Minister must insist that the maximum level must be 20% and that farmers can meet the requiremen­ts without any additional costs being imposed on them.

“CAP is an agricultur­al policy and we are in grave danger of turning it into a complex and unworkable grand eco strategy that it was never designed to be. “It was designed for farming and food and Minister McConalogu­e’s responsibi­lity is to ensure that CAP works for farmers, protects their incomes, and delivers for the wider food-based rural economy that they make work,” concluded Mr McCormack.

 ??  ?? ICMSA president Pat McCormack.
ICMSA president Pat McCormack.

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