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£5.2 Million Cash Boost For Welsh Farmers

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A £5.2 million cash boost for Welsh farmers and a fairer approach to funding across all four corners of the UK has been announced by the UK Government.

Following the recommendations of an independent review led by Lord Bew, the UK Government will allocate £5.2 million of new funding for Welsh farmers until 2022 and create a more tailored funding formula under the UK Government’s funding commitment for this Parliament.

Lord Bew’s review, announced last year, looked at what factors should determine the distribution of so-called ‘convergence’ funding – additional Common Agricultural Policy funding allocated to the UK between 2014 and 2020 to make payment rates more equal between EU Member States – to farmers over the next two years.

Secretary of State for Wales Alun Cairns said:

“The findings from this review build on the UK Government’s commitment to deliver for Welsh farmers, following the Prime Minister’s recent visit to Shervington Farm in Newport.

“I am delighted to confirm that we will be accepting the funding recommendations of the review, and that Welsh farmers will receive over £5m in new funding over the next two years.

“This is a prime example of how leaving the EU will provide us with the opportunity to shape our own policies which better represent the people we serve, ensuring Welsh farmers get a fairer deal in all parts of Wales.”

The new formula to distribute funding across the UK will reward land that previously received less CAP funding per hectare than the EU average. This means the support of the Pillar 1 budget will be tilted slightly towards those who farm in challenging environments, such as upland areas.

Lord Bew’s recommendations aim to address the concerns of farmers and either maintain or increase funding for farmers in other parts of the UK for the 2020 and 2021 scheme years.

This includes:

  • Agriculture funding for 2020-22 should be maintained in England and Northern Ireland and increased in Wales and Scotland. This means an overall funding uplift of £56.59 million will be new money allocated by the Treasury.
  • Convergence funding for 2020-22 should be divided according to land across the UK that previously received less CAP funding per hectare than the EU average.
  • The ‘per-hectare’ approach is not suitable for future farm support budgets.
  • That the budget should reflect the challenges facing farms operating in difficult environments, such as our upland areas.
  • Administrations across the UK engage collectively to agree principles for allocation of agriculture funding after 2022.
  • UK Governments in all parts of the UK recognise the critical value of farming by protecting, if not enhancing, future agriculture funding – particularly in the context of EU Exit uncertainty.

The panel proposes the following allocations of this funding from 2020 to 2022, but with implied reductions offset with additional funding.

  • England – 13.9 per cent
  •  Scotland – 63.7 per cent
  • Wales – 13.7 per cent
  • Northern Ireland – 8.7 per cent

In reaching these recommendations, the panel consulted with farming stakeholders, political parties and economists across the UK, as well as Ministers from the Scottish and Welsh Governments and senior officials from Northern Ireland’s Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA).

Business News Wales