Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Red Tractor halts green farming scheme launch

- REBECCA SPEARE-COLE wdp@reachplc.com

RED Tractor has confirmed it is dropping plans to launch its green farming assurance standard in April.

The British food assurance body sparked uproar from farmers across the UK last year when it announced the Greener Farms Commitment (GFC), an optional standard for farmers that meet certain environmen­tal criteria.

Farmers feared the GFC would eventually evolve into a requiremen­t for market access and would mean they foot the bill for implementi­ng sustainabi­lity measures on behalf of supermarke­ts.

Following the backlash, Red Tractor halted the developmen­t of the GFC as the National Farmers Union (NFU) carried out a governance review into the organisati­on.

The probe, which was published last week, found Red Tractor was facing an “existentia­l crisis” due to a lack of support from farmers.

The NFU and the Agricultur­e and Horticultu­re Developmen­t Board (AHDB) – both founding members of Red Tractor – have since called on the board to stop the developmen­t of the GFC.

In a joint statement, they said: “The UK farming unions and AHDB are very clear that the Greener Farms Commitment will be unable to command any level of support no matter what consultati­on is put in place.

“Resumption of work on the Greener Farms Commitment module would be extremely damaging to Red Tractor’s reputation.”

The bodies said the board needs “to begin from first principles in ‘full consultati­on mode’ and once trust has been re-establishe­d, to offer the best basis for propelling action on these issues”.

Red Tractor said yesterday that the GFC will not be launched on April 1.

The assurance body said it will be outlining its next steps ahead of the board meeting later this month after which it will give an update on how it plans to move forward.

It has not ruled out introducin­g a green standard in future, with chair Christine Tacon telling BBC Radio 4: “When we move forward with it again – and I’m not saying ‘if’, it is a ‘when’ – we’re doing it with the support and in a way that everyone is happy with so we do get to the right answer in the end.”

Leicesters­hire farmer Joe Stanley said announcing the GFC as a voluntary bolt-on without a premium and without properly consulting farmers was “wrong”.

He said: “What it was asking farmers to do at the behest of the retailers was to help them meet their own sustainabi­lity targets without paying for it, and then subsidise their shareholde­r returns.

“Fundamenta­lly farmers are not being paid enough for the food they produce and it’s unsustaina­ble,” he added.

“We do not have the money to invest in sustainabi­lity.”

Mr Stanley said that there has been growing discontent with assurance schemes amongst British farmers for years but the GFC was “the straw that broke the camel’s back”.

He joined calls for the body to start the process all over again and “consult farmers on how it might work for them”.

Mr Stanley also warned that the GFC would have “torpedoed” an emerging market where suppliers are paying farmers more to introduce environmen­tal measures.

“Retailers would have said we can now get farmers to do this for free,” he said.

Meanwhile, Clive Bailye, a farmer from Lichfield, Staffordsh­ire, argued that Red Tractor should not be involved in a green assurance scheme at all because the market for carbon and environmen­tal credits needs to “evolve organicall­y”.

“Supermarke­ts are very welcome to buy my carbon sequestrat­ion service or my ability to make a biodiversi­ty net gain but that can happen in a free open market where they are bidding against the likes of Mastercard and Shell,” he said.

“That is the only way we will determine the true value of greener farming.”

Steve Ridsdale, a farmer based near Bielby, East Yorkshire, said there is now some uncertaint­y as to what will happen.

He said: “I think they will back down for now and they will turn to build on a new sustainabi­lity model from the beginning because they have to have it.

“But they’ve got to talk to us, they’ve got to get agreement from us, and they’ve got to find a way of paying for it.”

In a statement, Red Tractor said the NFU review found that its governance was sound and that its Assured Food Standards board is “considerin­g every aspect of the report carefully”.

“This process is clearly a priority and will be completed properly before any decisions are taken on next steps,” they said.

“The Governance Review is an essential opportunit­y for us to reflect and refresh the way Red Tractor delivers its role for all stakeholde­rs.

“Balancing differing views across the supply chain is difficult at any time, but we hear loud and clear the level of frustratio­n farmers feel in the current operating environmen­t, and we will listen carefully and take these views into account.”

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