The Scotsman

Climate change reports buried in the purdah flood

- Comment Brian Henderson brianhighl­and@hotmail.co.uk

Just in case you missed it as you grabbed the chance to get on with some spring drilling, last week was pretty busy on the political announceme­nt front.

In fact there were more government reports, initiative­s, decisions and declaratio­ns rolled out last Wednesday than you would normally see during the course of a month of Sundays.

And I’m sure that the fact that the purdah period before the Scottish elections kicked in the very next day was nothing more than a coincidenc­e.

Traditiona­lly the sixweek period prior to elections is a time in which civil servants must be seen to be politicall­y impartial and avoid the announceme­nt of any new or controvers­ial government matters which could be construed as being advantageo­us to either an individual or a political party.

So, for those keeping a keen weather eye on farming matters, what did we see squeezed into the last few hours before this practice came into effect?

Well, on top of the announceme­nt which materialis­ed from the RHASS about the £750,000 Highland Show bailout, there was also the passing of the new legislatio­n on the control of dogs which saw the fines for attacks on livestock massively increased and bolstered by the threat of a year’s imprisonme­nt (although this received pretty close to unanimous support).

We also saw the release of the latest Land Use Strategy Report, a paper on the Just Transition towards the country’s greener future, an interim report from the climate assembly, the response to the independen­t review of deer management and confirmati­on of the most recent Scottish

Agricultur­al Wages Board order.

In most cases I think that rather than seeking any political gain, their publicatio­n was more of a tidying up exercise to get them in before the bell – a bit like the rush to get the last bits of paperwork sorted before the farm assurance assessor visits.

But it was a bit sad to see that the publicatio­n of the reports from the farmer-led groups on climate change which were also released on the very same day seemed to get a bit buried in the rush. And rather than receiving the fanfare and press attention which met the beef suckler group’s initial report which came out last year, the new reports slipped in almost under the radar.

On the positive side, I suppose the pressure to get the reports completed by that deadline provided the discipline of having a target to aim for as with sowing, lambing and calving all kicking in as spring appeared, I suspect that there would have been a bit of a dilution in the keen focus which the members of the groups were willing – or able – to give to the issues, however important they’re going to be in the long term.

Having been a member of one of the groups, I know that the chairs and those tasked with drawing up the reports put a huge amount of effort into producing a set of readable, farmer-focused documents which have addressed the extremely difficult task of changing decades – if not centuries – of mindset.

For, while active farming and food production remain the central feature of all the reports, they also recgonise that taking a King Canute approach to climate change simply won’t work – and that additional aims and other goods and services will need to be delivered by the industry if it’s going to be seen to be doing its bit towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

I would certainly suggest that it will be far better to work to recommenda­tions made by people with practical experience of the industry than it would be to cope with the harsh expediency and big stick which might be wielded if we don’t.

And while the various groups – one for arable, dairy, pigs and crofting and hill and upland, along with the earlier suckler beef group – were set up on a “silo” basis to look at their own individual sectors – a move which could have led to division – I was relieved to see that one of the firm conclusion­s to be put forward by all was that the issue simply must be tackled in a whole industry way.

 ??  ?? 0 Climate change must be faced by the industry as a whole
0 Climate change must be faced by the industry as a whole

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