Abstract:. Brexit repatriates agriculture policy and subsidies after over 40 years of determination by the European Commission. The paper starts by describing t
I’ve watched the attempted CAP and CFP reforms for decades. It just won’t happen, the agriculture lobbyists, vetoes and France ensure that.
There is no time left to save our soil, fewer than 100 harvests according to some.
The UK’s entire net contribution to the EU for the last budget, 66 billion, was wasted on failed policy to halt biodiversity loss according to the EU’s own auditors.
We assessed whether the EU’s agricultural policy has helped to maintain and enhance farmland biodiversity. We found that the formulation of the agriculture targets in the EU biodiversity strategy makes it difficult to measure progress; the way the Commission tracks biodiversity expenditure in the EU budget is unreliable; the impact of CAP direct payments is limited or unknown;
The EU has funnelled €66 billion into farmland biodiversity since 2014 – and has little to show for it. That’s the conclusion of a special report released on Friday by the European Court of Auditors. The auditors slammed the half-baked targets of the EU 2020 biodiversity strategy, its odd-couple relationship with CAP, lack of monitoring, and some very un-smart spending by the European Commission
However, in the early 70s it was already becoming apparent that the creation of this highly productive agricultural system brought with it some profoundly negative environmental effect
The agricultural Commissioner Sicco Mansholt recognised this as early as 1972, and appealed for a move towards circular agriculture as a way of preventing the destruction of natural resources.
Since 1972… I don’t hold out hope of them fixing it
The replacement Agriculture Policy has removed production subsidy. Problem solved. Now it’s time for solutions like regenerative farming and controlled environment agriculture.
Should have stayed in the single market though, unnecessary disruption. And I love disruption.
Fair enough, I just don’t really have faith that the UK is genuinely going to make any changes that have the desired positive impact, at least not on a national/regulatory level. I would be happy to be proven wrong on a large scale!!
I’ve watched the attempted CAP and CFP reforms for decades. It just won’t happen, the agriculture lobbyists, vetoes and France ensure that.
There is no time left to save our soil, fewer than 100 harvests according to some.
The UK’s entire net contribution to the EU for the last budget, 66 billion, was wasted on failed policy to halt biodiversity loss according to the EU’s own auditors.
https://www.eca.europa.eu/en/publications?did=53892
https://www.arc2020.eu/cap-billions-spent-on-biodiversity-with-little-impact-auditors/
Since 1972… I don’t hold out hope of them fixing it
https://www.wur.nl/en/research-results/research-institutes/economic-research/show-wecr/towards-a-more-effective-common-agricultural-policy.htm
The replacement Agriculture Policy has removed production subsidy. Problem solved. Now it’s time for solutions like regenerative farming and controlled environment agriculture.
Should have stayed in the single market though, unnecessary disruption. And I love disruption.
Fair enough, I just don’t really have faith that the UK is genuinely going to make any changes that have the desired positive impact, at least not on a national/regulatory level. I would be happy to be proven wrong on a large scale!!
We already have a new agriculture policy that does not incentivise production
https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/how-has-uk-agricultural-policy-changed-since-brexit/