NFU responds to latest Environmental Land Management announcement

06 January 2022

NFU Vice President Tom Bradshaw

The NFU has given its response to the latest government announcements on the future of farming support schemes.

Defra Secretary of State George Eustice is due to unveil further details on the Local Nature Recovery and Landscape Recovery schemes in a keynote speech at the Oxford Farming Conference.

NFU Vice President Tom Bradshaw said: “British farmers are proud to produce climate-friendly food to some of the highest standards in the world, alongside maintaining and protecting the great British countryside, its air, water, soils and its wildlife.

“We welcome today’s further clarity on the roll-out of the Local Nature Recovery and Landscape Recovery as part of the agricultural transition, including scheme eligibility and option-based approach available to farmers to support activity such as the creation of wetland habitats and managing trees and woodlands. The increases in payment rates for new Countryside Stewardship agreements are also welcome.

“The NFU has always maintained that the ‘public money for public goods’ approach must focus on sustainable food production and environmental delivery going hand-in-hand. While it is encouraging that sustainable food production is recognised, there is still a lack of detail on how it fits in with the schemes’ ambitions to improve farm biodiversity, restore peatlands and manage woodlands. This lack of detail is preventing farmers from making crucial long-term decisions that are essential to them running viable and profitable businesses.

“There are still a number of questions that need answers, not least the costs farmers are likely to incur from participating in these new schemes and how the schemes are accessible right across the country and for every farmer. Currently there appears to be a lack of options for tenant farmers to get involved and this must be addressed as a matter of urgency.

“It is also clear that neither Local Nature Recovery or Landscape Recovery will be widely available to farmers over the next three years, making it difficult to replace the falling income from BPS. To remedy this, farmers must have more detail about the new Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI), specifically when will SFI ‘early rollout’ be launched this year and how quickly can the SFI offer be increased to enable greater uptake, so they can make the important decisions needed now which will affect their business for years to come.

“Only by ensuring these schemes incentivise sustainable food production, allow every farm business to be involved, and pay farmers fairly for the costs they incur, will they attract the participation the government envisages to deliver our collective environmental and net zero ambitions.

“At a time when public support for British food and farming is at a high, our biggest concern is that these schemes result in reduced food production in the UK, leading to the need to import more food from countries with production standards that would be illegal for our farmers here. This simply off-shores our production and any environmental impacts that go with it and would be morally reprehensible.”

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Notes to editor:

  1. British farmers are already delivering a huge amount for the environment:
    • Farmers have planted wildflower habitat the size of 10,000 football pitches to provide homes and food for bees.
    • Farmers maintain 411,600 km of hedgerows in England and Wales, a length which is enough to wrap round the earth’s equator more than 10 times, and around 95,000 km of stone walls on farmland in England and Wales.
    • British farmers are working to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions across the whole of agriculture by 2040, 10 years ahead of the Government’s UK plan.
    • Putting in place extra support for birds, through growing bird seed mixes or by winter feeding, has resulted in 25 species from the Red List for Birds of Conservation Concern being recorded in last year’s Big Farmland Bird Count, with eight appearing in the 25 most frequently seen species list.
    • Farmers produce renewable energy that helps power an average of 10 million homes.
  2. Defra Secretary of State George Eustice will today announce further details on the Local Nature Recovery scheme and Landscape Recovery scheme which will be rolled out as part of Environmental Land Management.
  3. He will make the announcements at the 2022 Oxford Farming Conference – held virtually.