Farmers fear controversial EU plans herald return to dark ages

Friday 3rd February 2012, 10:59AM GMT.

Farmers fear controversial EU plans herald return to dark ages

Farmers in Shropshire say the county’s agricultural industry will be pushed back into the dark ages if controversial EU plans are approved.

Brussels bureaucrats are presently renegotiating the Common Agricultural Policy which determines the way the industry is run. However, the plans presently on the table could have an adverse effect on local farmers, according to regional leaders from the National Farmers Union.

John Mercer, NFU regional director, said: “The proposals, as they stand, will take the industry backwards at a time when we need to be going forwards.”

The CAP ensures that money is given to the industry to protect farmers from volatile markets. That in turn helps to protect shoppers from volatile food prices and also helps to protect rural heritage, the countryside and its environment.

The NFU in the West Midlands believes the proposals to reform CAP, particularly the ‘greening’ measures, will prevent innovation and development on Shropshire farms.

Industry leaders say some of the changes put forward threaten to overwhelm farm businesses and make the industry less competitive. Farmers have concerns about the concept of ‘greening’, where in the future 30 per cent of direct support could be conditional on them following mandatory environmental measures.

Mr Mercer said officials trying to make sure the voices of local farmers were heard.

He said: “Fortunately there is now time for farmers and the NFU to lobby MPs and MEPs and demonstrate the damaging impact these proposals could have. Our members are in the business of producing food and need to feed a growing population in a more sustainable way so any proposal to take land out of production is a real backward step.

“These proposals are also potentially damaging to the farmed environment which farmers are working so hard to improve.

“We need to work together and lobby to help simplify these proposals so there is a streamlined, workable system from 2014.”


  1. 1
    Rupert Barrington-Black

    Farmers yet again complaining that their grossly over subsidised industry is coming in for further scrutiny.

    Farming should be treated the same as any other industry. No subsidy.

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  2. 2
    julian

    Knowing nothing about farming, the list of reforms to the policy, sound, on the face of it, very sensible – getting younger people involved, investing in research and innovation, stimulating rural employment, etc.

    The article above seems to suggest the main issue is with the “green” payments, which again, on the face of it, seem to be aimed at preserving the long term health of farming, rather than the current practice of throttling the land for everything we can get in the short term.

    More than happy to be told I am misunderstanding and to be enlightened, but the claim of back to the dark ages sounds ridiculous without more detail than the article above gives. Poor choice of headline.

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    • Benbow Tom

      I agree entirely – ‘greening measures’ sounds very positive and something we should be supporting if we want farming to be sustainable and viable for future generations. The NFU seem to be the ones in the Dark Ages and the Shropshire Star have failed to provide a balanced article that would enable readers to make an informed decision. No change there then!

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  3. 3
    Gringo

    Prehaps with less money, farms will refrain from buying the stupidly large tractors which they insist on using these days. Prehaps then the country roads will stand a chance of lasting more than five minutes once these lothiathans can no longer be afforded.

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  4. 4
    gringo

    “Leviathan” worst spelling mistake ever!!!

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