New Government Should Set Positive Agenda for Farming

UK - The National Farmers Union is looking forward to working with the new government to shape and implement their food and farming manifesto pledges.
calendar icon 13 May 2015
clock icon 3 minute read

The new Government comes to power with a detailed and positive agenda for agriculture. There is a welcome recognition that what farming needs is what the Government wants to do: investing for growth, securing access to knowledge and technology, enhancing farmers’ ability to tackle animal and plant health, building safe and secure food chains and protecting key environmental assets.

The NFU is also urging the government for speedy and decisive action with pressing issues such as BPS and TB eradication.

Problems with the change from an online-only farm payment system could see farmers ending up being paid late or suffering financial penalties through no fault of their own; while the ongoing scourge of bovine TB continues to see 26,000 cattle slaughtered every year.

NFU President Meurig Raymond said: “We welcome the fact the election has delivered a stable government and we hope this will mean that crucial farming issues are dealt with rapidly from the outset.

“Central to the new Government’s goals will be an ambitious plan for ‘British farming with plans to grow more, buy more and sell more British food at home and abroad’. The NFU and farmers share this ambition. We have already argued strongly that we need such a plan to reverse long- term declines in farming productivity and the nation’s self-sufficiency. So we are eager to begin working as soon as possible with the Secretary of State to begin this task.

“The government must also ensure that focus is kept on fixing problems and issues surrounding BPS and its foot is kept on the pedal because with just weeks to go until the crucial June 15 deadline, time is running out.

“We are also urging the Government to make an announcement as soon as possible on further roll-out of badger culling to areas where TB in endemic and to implement the 25-year TB Eradication Strategy in full as quickly as possible.”

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