British farmers told to be aware of EU’s CAP reform plans

The EU's changes are important for British farmers as it is still unclear when a specific UK policy will appear
The EU's changes are important for British farmers as it is still unclear when a specific UK policy will appear

British farmers should be aware of European Union's Common Agricultural Policy reform plans given the ongoing uncertainty Brexit talks are experiencing.

Europe’s plans for reforming the CAP should be factored in to UK farmers’ business planning, given it is still unclear when any future domestic agricultural policy will apply from and what conditions might be attached to any future trade deals, according to Strutt & Parker.

The European Commission has recently published a legal document on EU farming policy and support after 2020, which includes capping of payments and cuts to environmental and rural development spending.

Key elements of the EU’s plans for the CAP from 2020 to 2027 include greater power for Member States to design their own policies, under both Pillar 1 (direct payments) and Pillar 2 (environment and rural development).

New plans will see a 15% cut in real terms in the total CAP budget, and the introduction of a compulsory 100,000 euro ceiling on direct payments per beneficiary per year, with reductions in payments applying from 60,000 euros to redirect money at small- and medium-sized farms.

Higher levels of direct support for young farmers and simpler administration procedures for smaller farms will also commence, as well as scrapping existing greening rules which could be replaced with new requirements.

According to Strutt & Parker, the changes are important for British farmers as it is still unclear when a specific UK policy will appear, given ongoing uncertainties in Brexit talks.

Chair of Strutt & Parker’s Farm Research Group, George Chichester said: “Although the proposals are still open to negotiation and change, so cannot be treated as definitive, it is possible we may have to comply with these rules until our British policy is ready.

“We hope to find out more about the possible timing when the government publishes the Agriculture Bill, which Defra Secretary Michael Gove has indicated will be before the end of July.”

Mr Chichester added that even if a domestic agricultural policy is in operation by the time the European reforms come into effect, UK farmers will want a sense of how their position could compare to that of farmers in other countries, as they will be competitors in the global marketplace.