The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

NFUS top team unveils its farm support vision

Brexit: Union frustrated by agricultur­e wrangling puts forward own plans

- BY NANCY NICOLSON

A gung-ho Brexit roadshow swung into Perth this week, manned by farmers’ union leaders who proffered a ready-made farm support regime for roll-out by 2021 or 2022.

NFU Scotland’s (NFUS) top team made no secret of their frustratio­n over the Scottish Government’s continued wrangling on whether or not to adopt Westminste­r’s Agricultur­e Bill and the absence of an alternativ­e plan from Holyrood.

Within hours, however, government officials likened the union’s proposals and calculatio­ns to “fantasy football”, and pointed out that putting a detailed practical support plan in place and matching it to available resources was more equivalent to fielding a real team on the pitch at Old Trafford.

A government source also rejected the suggestion that farmers’ financial security was being put at risk because time was running out to get legal instrument­s in place to ensure the continuanc­e of farm payments postBrexit. He said there was “categorica­lly no risk” of such disruption to the industry, and while reaching agreement with Defra was a preferred option, Scottish Government could “easily” introduce new, straightfo­rward legislatio­n.

Meanwhile NFUS believes its three-tier support regime proposals are filling a void left by the

“Farmers need more certainty and confidence”

Scottish Government. The plans involve a financial stability payment for “actively-farmed hectares”, and competitiv­e and noncompeti­tive productivi­ty and environmen­tal payments, with an assumed budget of £200 per hectare. They say the same amount of support should be given to farms, albeit farmers will have to do different things to unlock that cash.

Aberfeldy hill farmer and union vice-president Martin Kennedy presented the detailed model to around 70 farmers at Perth. NFUS policy director Jonnie Hall admitted the union had no “Plan B”. Both men indicated they wanted to see the industry moving faster towards a new support mechanism than the Scottish Government’s slowly-slowly approach.

Mr Hall said: We see it as being a much more urgent requiremen­t because if you’re going to get it right in how you’re going to deliver it, you have to plan it now. Let’s test it and if it doesn’t work start afresh.

“Farmers need more certainty and confidence than is currently in place and if we just do the same again with a bit of tinkering and pilots here and there, that’s not going to get people thinking long-term.”

 ??  ?? PAYMENTS: Scottish Government officials likened NFU Scotland’s regime model to ‘fantasy football’
PAYMENTS: Scottish Government officials likened NFU Scotland’s regime model to ‘fantasy football’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom