Farmers' Plea To Delay Eco-Friendly Subsidies Is 'Threat To Net Zero Target'
The Guardian|April 27, 2022
There will be a “substantial gap”in UK agriculture's efforts to reach net zero if post-Brexit environment-friendly subsidies are delayed two more years, according to new analysis.
Farmers' Plea To Delay Eco-Friendly Subsidies Is 'Threat To Net Zero Target'

The National Farmers' Union is urging the government to delay environmental land management schemes (Elms) until 2025 and in the interim keep the EU's basic payment scheme (BPS), which pays farmers for the amount of land they own, regardless of its impact on the environment.

The union said this is to provide stability during a tumultuous time for UK farmers, with the price of fertiliser rocketing due to the Ukraine war, Covid-related staff shortages, and the departure of EU seasonal workers and other Brexit-related issues. The shadow secretary for environment, food and rural affairs, Jim McMahon, has backed the NFU's stance.

However, analysis by the think tank Green Alliance shows that delaying Elms - the main means of helping farmers decarbonise - would result in agricultural emissions savings in 2035 being at only half what they could have been. It would put pressure on other areas to decarbonise faster to make up for this loss, leaving a “substantial gap in the UK's net zero plans”, according to the report.

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