West Sussex Gazette

FARMING Grants available for farmers to improve their holdings

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armers in England can apply for a wider range of capital grants, including new grants to help improve air quality, through the latest round of the Countrysid­e Stewardshi­p Scheme (CSS) which opened for applicatio­ns on February 9.

The maximum level of funding available for the different groups of capital-only grants has also risen from £10,000 to £20,000.

Defra has revealed that a key change to countrysid­e stewardshi­p this year is a larger range of capital items will be offered to farmers and landowners under a new capital grants offer, designed to sit alongside the simplified wildlife offers.

This capital grants offer will act as an umbrella for the old water quality and hedgerows and boundaries grant schemes and the number of capital items available through it has also been expanded to 67.

This aims to give farmers greater flexibilit­y to implement changes which will bring environmen­tal benefits, without requiring them to sign up for a five-year mid-tier agreement.

The capital-only grants have always been popular with farmers, but there could be even greater uptake this time, given the level of interest there is in improving environmen­tal performanc­e within the sector. These grants are an opportunit­y to be able to improve a farm’s infrastruc­ture to reduce air and water pollution from agricultur­e.

Farmers wanting to access capital grants have the choice of applying for either a standalone two-year option under CSS, or as part of a wider five-year mid-tier CSS agreement.

Under the standalone scheme option, farmers will be able to apply for up to £20,000 to fund work on boundaries, trees and orchards (previously the hedgerows and boundary scheme), another £20,000 to pay for water capital works and an additional £20,000 for air quality projects.

As part of a mid-tier offer, applicatio­ns will be capped at £120,000 for both air and water quality items and £50,000 for hedgerows and boundaries. This is another change, as previously there was no limit if capital items were part of a wider mid-tier applicatio­n, including other field management options.

Capital grants to improve water quality include funding for concrete yard renewal,

Fthe installati­on of rainwater harvesting equipment, alternativ­e drinking sources for livestock away from watercours­es and ponds, lined bio-beds, plus the roofing of silage camps, collecting yards, muck heaps, slurry and silage stores.

The new air quality grant options will help to fund automatic slurry scrapers and the installati­on of low ammonia emission flooring for livestock buildings.

Farmers wanting to apply for some water and air quality capital grants would need the approval of a catchment sensitive farming officer (CSFO) before they put in their applicatio­n.

The deadline for water capital grant applicatio­ns is earlier than in previous years, so this means farmers will need to act quickly. The deadline for applicatio­ns is April 30 and Defra has said farmers must put in their approval request to their local CSFO at least six weeks before this, which means by Friday March 19 at the very latest.

Make contact with your local CSFO as soon as possible, as they can get very busy and the process of approval may be slow again this year because of lockdown restrictio­ns. Natural England has already said it will not consider any request forms that arrive late.

Farmers needing CSFO approval for capital items which form part of a mid-tier applicatio­n have until June 18 to put in their request form. The scheme will close for midtier applicatio­ns on30 July 30.

The Countrysid­e Stewardshi­p Scheme is due to remain open to new applicatio­ns until 2023, with the final round of agreements starting in January 2024, ahead of the national rollout of the Environmen­tal Land Management (ELM) scheme later that year.

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