The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

NFUS: Support must go direct

- KATRINA MACARTHUR

NFU Scotland is calling unequivoca­lly for 80% of the Scottish Government’s future support package to continue to be dedicated as direct support to Tiers 1 and 2 under its proposed four-tier agricultur­al policy.

With £620 million of Scottish agricultur­al support coming from Westminste­r, the viability of Scottish agricultur­e and all it will deliver in the future is dependent on securing an overall support package available for spend within the new system.

However, a critical issue is how that funding is then allocated by the Scottish Government and its proposed support framework from 2025 onwards to provide conditiona­l payments under 4 tiers – Base, Enhanced, Elective, and Complement­ary.

The direct support for Scotland’s farmers and crofters adds up to around £550m per year when delivered primarily through the Basic Payment Scheme, Greening, Voluntary Coupled Support for beef calves and upland sheep and the Less Favoured Areas Support Scheme, but with no certainty beyond 2024.

The total figure for the Scottish Government’s agricultur­e and rural economy spending is equivalent to around £680m, resulting in 80% being paid out as direct support.

The union has written to Rural Affairs Secretary Mairi Gougeon to prioritise precious public funding in the future by delivering it as direct support.

NFUS president Martin Kennedy said maintainin­g direct support funding to farming and crofting businesses across Scotland will protect £3 billion of expenditur­e in the wider rural economy and more than £3.5bn of output.

The union believes that, to achieve the policy objectives relating to food production, climate and biodiversi­ty, we must retain at least 50% of direct support as a base payment in Tier 1, with the levers of effective cross-compliance, as is the case now, doing the work that rules and regulation­s cannot.

The same principles then extend into the future Tier 2 enhanced measures where the remaining 50% of direct support must be exclusivel­y targeted. This is where direct support will deliver more on climate and nature, building on the foundation­s of Tier 1 base direct support and incentivis­ing farmers and crofters to do the right things in the right places to deliver the right outcomes.

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