Woodfi nes Solicitors
On November 30, the government published its Agricultural Transition Plan 2021 to 2024, a document it has termed a ‘roadmap to a better, fairer farming system’. With the Brexit transition period about to expire, the UK will no longer be bound by the European Union’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). So, what does this mean for the future of English agriculture?
Rewarding farmers for promoting sustainability Starting in 2021, England will begin its transition away from the ‘bureaucratic’ CAP and towards new policies tailored to the interests of English farmers. Under the outgoing system, farmers receive grants, called Direct Payments, according to the amount of land they farm – meaning that the largest, richest farms often receive bigger grants, while smaller businesses and newcomers often receive the least support. T e government’s transition plan reveals that
Direct Payments will be halved by 2024 and abolished by 2028; they will be replaced with a new Environmental Land Management (ELM) system, which will see farmers rewarded for investing in sustainable farming practices – or ‘public money for public goods’. T e ‘public goods’ to be rewarded under the ELM include clean air, clean and plentiful water, thriving plants and wildlife, protection from environmental hazards, beauty, heritage and engagement with the environment and the reduction of, and adaptation to, climate change. Meanwhile, the money released from the wind- up of the Direct Payment scheme will be used to fund new grants and programmes to promote farming sustainability and productivity.
What next
Charlotte Benjamin Partner at Woodfi nes Solicitors.
for agriculture?
Investment in animal welfare T e government will also launch publicly funded incentives at the start of the UK’s agricultural transition to improve animal health and welfare. T e aim is to prepare livestock farmers for a future in which these higher standards become the basic legal minimum. Initially, these initiatives will focus on controlling or eradicating endemic diseases in cattle, pigs and sheep. T is will include increasing the sector’s understanding of responsible antibiotic use in animals, at a time when many are concerned that the UK’s exit from the EU will pave the way for substandard livestock imports from countries such as the US, in which antibiotic and growth hormone use in farming is widespread.
Farming Investment Fund A new Farming Investment Fund will also be set up to provide targeted support to farmers who are looking to invest in new equipment, technology and infrastructure in order to improve their profi tability and benefi t the environment. Based on a competitive process, higher- scoring applications will be more likely to win funding. T e scheme will be split into two strands to cater to higher and
lower-cost investments. T e lower-cost strand, entitled the Farming Equipment and Technology Fund, will offer grants towards the purchase of a specifi c list of items; the government is currently working with farmers, foresters, growers and experts to determine which items of equipment and technology should feature on this list. T e second strand, called the Farming Transformation Fund, will
provide more substantial grants for investments in technology or infrastructure with the potential to transform business performance.
The end goal According to the government, the changes will be rolled out over seven years so that, by 2028, farmers in England will be able to produce healthy food sustainably and profi tably without subsidies. By rewarding those producers committed to making sustainable
and environmentally friendly changes to the way they farm, the changes are also designed to work hand in hand with the UK’s wider target to reduce carbon emissions to net zero by 2050.
Here to help you transition successfully T e farming community is standing at the precipice of a period of immense change. With the English agricultural system set to undergo a profound transformation and with Brexit still causing so much uncertainty across all business sectors, support from our specialist Agribusiness and Rural Property team could mean the diff erence between struggling or thriving through England’s agricultural transition.
For expert advice and assistance, email agriculture@woodfi
nes.co.uk ALL THINGS BUSINESS 25
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