The Journal

TORY WILL FIGHT AGAINST REWILDING

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THE Conservati­ve candidate for the North East mayoral election has said he intends to “fight” against plans to rewild swathes of land used for farming.

The Government has set a target to rewild around 300,000 hectares of farmland within the next two decades.

However, the plans have been questioned by farmers, with the NFU calling targets “irrational” and “unachievab­le” in 2023.

At the mayoral hustings event hosted by Friends of the Earth in Alnwick last week, four of the prospectiv­e mayors faced questions on rewilding.

There was some support for the policy. Independen­t candidate Jamie Driscoll said: “If you look at the state our natural landscapes, it’s not massively natural. Forests are mainly monocultur­e and there is very little biodiversi­ty.

“We want more food production in the UK so we want rewilding in areas where we’re never going to grow much food. In those areas, rewilding is absolutely the answer.”

Labour’s Kim McGuinness broadly agreed, saying she supported rewilding “in the right places”. Similarly, Liberal Democrat candidate Aidan King said rewilding was “about getting the right things in the right places”.

However, Conservati­ve candidate Guy Renner-Thompson had a different view.

Coun Renner-Thompson, who is from a farming family, said: “I’m not in favour of rewilding. That said, if it is something a landowner wants to pursue that is up to them.

“The people that lose out are the tenant farming sector, not the large landowners. I know families who have lost thousands of acres of their farms to rewilding projects.

“If we remove farms from the communitie­s, you lose the communitie­s..”

The Tenant Farmers Associatio­n warned that some landowners are attempting to regain possession of land rented to tenant farmers to use it for rewilding schemes.

Around one third of farmland in the UK is rented, although in Northumber­land, 80,000 acres of the Duke of Northumber­land’s agricultur­al land is under the custodians­hip of more than 100 tenant farmers, many who have farmed the holdings for generation­s.

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