The Herald on Sunday

Farming isn’t the problem ... it is part of the solution

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AS we head from one crisis to another, we appear to have forgotten about the biggest threats facing us. The climate and biodiversi­ty crises haven’t gone away.

The reprieve in lockdowns when polluting industries came to a halt and the planet was able to breathe was short-lived as we gradually revert to our old ways.

The latest report by Scottish Environmen­t LINK member, WWF, shows that since the 1970s there has been an almost 70 per cent (69%) decrease in wildlife worldwide. The main drivers for this staggering decline are habitat loss, species over-exploitati­on, invasive species, pollution, climate change and diseases. This isn’t just bad news for nature, it’s also bad news for us.

A much-depleted natural world has a knock-on effect on all aspects of our life including health, economics and food security. Choosing not to mitigate climate change and reverse biodiversi­ty loss – while we still can – is a sure-fire way of stoking major problems.

In Scotland alone, one in nine species is at risk of extinction. Farming and land management are among the most harmful contributo­rs to biodiversi­ty loss and environmen­tal degradatio­n and among the top three sources of greenhouse gas emissions.

The Scottish Government is consulting on its proposals for a new Agricultur­e Bill that will determine how farming is funded for years to come. This provides us with an opportunit­y to rethink the decades-old farm funding system and replace it with one that works for nature, climate and people.

Annually, the Scottish Government spends more than half a billion pounds of taxpayers’ money on farm funding, but the money isn’t designed to support farmers and crofters to produce food in a way that helps to preserve nature or tackle climate change.

The current system is also deeply unfair. Most public spending on farming is used to pay farmers based on the amount of land they own, with no conditions attached as to how they farm that land. Some farmers benefit massively from Government funding under this system, while other, often smaller and environmen­tally friendly farmers, lose out.

As well as producing food, farmers and crofters manage three-quarters of Scotland’s land. By changing how it funds farming, the Scottish Government can create a fairer system that helps all farmers and crofters work in harmony with nature and our needs. By playing a part in restoring nature, tackling climate change, and revitalisi­ng Scotland’s rural areas, farming can work for the benefit of everyone, while providing quality affordable food. A growing number of farmers and crofters are already working with nature and climate in mind by keeping their soils healthy, planting trees, and making space for wildlife. But these farmers and crofters need more support.

Put simply, we have a choice and cannot afford to go on working against nature, driving it to breaking point, and still expect it to provide us with health and food. This is why, under the campaign Farm for Scotland’s Future, Scottish Environmen­t LINK, together with farmers and leading environmen­tal charities, is calling on the Government to take heed of the climate and nature crises and replace the outdated farm funding system.

By 2030, it must stop using the budget to reward land ownership and instead ensure funding for farmers works for the benefit of everyone.

We need to fund farmers to help create and maintain hedgerows and wildflower meadows, reduce chemical pesticide and fertiliser use, manage rivers, burns and land to mitigate flooding, create or restore specific habitats such as wetlands, heaths, species-rich grasslands, peatlands, floodplain­s and coastal saltmarshe­s – and help people access the countrysid­e for recreation.

Farming is not the problem – done right it’s part of the solution. Our ability to produce food in the future depends on our ability to maintain a healthy planet by changing practices that are pushing it to a perilous state. Funding and support to transition to sustainabl­e farming is essential in helping to rebuild a thriving planet that can provide jobs, security and nutritious, affordable food for everyone.

 ?? ?? Deborah Long of Scottish Environmen­t LINK
Deborah Long of Scottish Environmen­t LINK

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