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Gove outlines plans for farming post-Brexit
Mr Gove said he wants a new method of providing financial support to farmers, moving away from subsidies.
Comments come ahead of government’s Command Paper

Defra secretary Michael Gove has shed light on future plans for the farming industry post-Brexit, in a speech at the Oxford Farming Conference.

Mr Gove said he wants to drive change in four specific areas: creating a “coherent” policy on food; giving farmers the time and tools to adapt to the future; implementing a new method for providing financial support to farmers; and developing a sustainable future for the countryside.

The secretary of state also proposed to invest more in technology, including super-fast broadband, reliable 5G coverage and sensor technology that can tell where, when and how livestock should be fed, housed and bred to maximise yield, health and welfare.

The UK will formally leave the EU in March 2019, but the government expects to agree a transition period of a further two years. Mr Gove’s comments come ahead of the government’s Command Paper, which is due to be published this spring.

Trade negotiations
As trade negotiations are about to get underway, Mr Gove said Defra “is preparing for every eventuality”. However, he added: “We are confident of building a new economic partnership with the EU that guarantees tariff-free access for agri-food goods across each other’s borders.”

Nonetheless, he said access to other markets outside the EU 27 “will be important to British agriculture’s further success”, including increasing exports to China.

Farmer payments
The Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), which pays land owners for the amount of agricultural land they have, was described as “unjust” and “inefficient”. Gove said he wants to move away from subsidies, to a new approach of public money for public goods.

The government has guaranteed that cash allocated for farming support will be protected up until the end of this parliament in 2022. Support for Countryside Stewardship agreements that were entered into before Brexit will continue. The 2019 BPS scheme will be paid on the same basis as currently.

Mr Gove said he then envisages guaranteeing BPS payments for a transition period of a number of years beyond implementation, depending on the results of a consultation. During these years Defra is proposing to first reduce the largest payments in England.

Defra also plans to provide new support for farmers who choose to manage their land in the most sustainable manner. In addition, the government will create a scheme for land owners or managers who wish to enhance the natural environment by, for example, planting woodland, providing new wildlife habitats and increasing biodiversity.

Inspections
Mr Gove said Defra should change its approach to inspections, which he believes are currently undertaken “too often, too ineffectively and in far too many cases for the wrong things”. He hopes to “look at how we can reduce the number of inspections overall, make them more genuinely risk-based and have them focus on those, limited, areas, where standards are not what they should be.”

The response from vets and farmers
In a statement after Mr Gove’s speech, BVA president John Fishwick said: “Delivering public goods should be at the heart of a new post Brexit agricultural policy, benefiting producers, consumers and wider society.
 
“Today Mr Gove committed to investing in the public goods of the natural environment, technology and skills, infrastructure, public access and rural resilience. Yet any post Brexit agricultural policy must also support animal health and welfare as public goods, since these are the very reasons that we have our global reputation for agricultural produce and high standards.”

However, Mr Fishwick commented: “In equipping the next generation of farmers with the latest tech and training, we shouldn’t underestimate the importance of continued side-by-side working between farmers and local vets in order to optimise animal health and welfare, productivity and competitiveness.
 
“Vets are integral to food production, from farm to fork, and so vets must also be an integral part of any policy development, review and implementation.”

The National Farmer’s Union (NFU) welcomed the speech as ‘impressive and comprehensive’. President Meurig Raymond said: “"I was pleased to hear the Secretary of State talking about the need to invest in technology, skills and rural resilience - all of which he says are public goods.

"Michael Gove also spoke about the importance of delivering benefits for the environment, something that farmers already advocate and perform highly on. Mr Gove was absolutely right to recognise the vital contribution that uplands farmers have in maintaining their iconic landscape.”
 

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Reporting service for dead wild birds updated

News Story 1
 The Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) has updated its online reporting service for dead wild birds.

The new version allows those reporting a dead bird to drop a pin on a map when reporting the location. It also includes a wider range of wild bird species groups to select from when describing the bird.

The online service, which helps APHA to monitor the spread of diseases such as avian influenza, can be accessed here

Click here for more...
News Shorts
NI chief vet urges bluetongue vigilance

Northern Ireland's chief veterinary officer (CVO) has urged farmers to be vigilant for signs of bluetongue, after the Animal and Plant Health Agency warned there was a very high probability of further cases in Great Britain.

There have been 126 confirmed cases of bluetongue virus serotype 3 in England since November 2023, with no cases reported in Northern Ireland. The movement of live ruminants from Great Britain to Northern Ireland is currently suspended.

According to the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA), the virus is most likely to enter Northern Ireland through infected animals or germplasm (semen or ova) being imported.

Brian Dooher, Northern Ireland's CVO, said: "Surveillance for this disease within Northern Ireland has been increased to assist with detection at the earliest opportunity which will facilitate more effective control measures."

Farmers should report any suspicions of the disease to their private veterinary practitioner, the DAERA Helpline on 0300 200 7840 or their local DAERA Direct Veterinary Office.