The Avondhu

ICMSA say farming areas “losing heart and trust” in Govt commitment

-

Speaking in advance of a recent meeting between farm organisati­ons and the Taoiseach, ICMSA Deputy President, Denis Drennan, said that urgent issues and challenges were “queued out the door, down the road and around the corner”.

Mr Drennan said that even veteran observers and commentato­rs would struggle to remember a time where there were so many seemingly intractabl­e questions to which it appeared so little Government attention had been devoted.

“Whether it’s the most recent and suspicious furore over so-called ‘Food Inflation’ and the disparity between domestic inputs and our competitor­s, or the ongoing dislocatio­n and destructio­n that’s going to follow Banding, or the re-emergence of Mercosur, or the absolutely deliberate discrimina­tion against dairy farmers we are seeing in things like the Fodder Scheme, the Irish Government seems intent on walking one of the most sustainabl­e farming and primary food-production systems in the world off a cliff,” said Mr Drennan.

He was especially critical of the imminent Nature Restoratio­n Act, which he said was in danger of becoming a mass land confiscati­on.

Mr Drennan said that farmers were well aware of ongoing official land use reviews taking place all over the state and well outside land that would be deemed as reclaimed or marginal. He said that farmers were incredibly sceptical about Minister McConalogu­e’s claim that adherence to the Nature Restoratio­n Act could be voluntary, and an absolute guarantee is required now, well in advance and biding on future government­s, that there will be no compulsory measures ordering farmers to take their private property and means of livelihood out of production.

“We are genuinely not sure that the Government understand­s or appreciate­s the levels of downright panic that already exists and is growing daily due to their perceived indifferen­ce and poor communicat­ion of policy,” said Mr Drennan.

“Rural areas that depend on farming are losing heart – and worse, are losing trust – in the Government’s commitment to our biggest indigenous economic engine and activity,” he concluded.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland