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EU shake-up on farming subsidies | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
The EU has unveiled a plan for reform of its Common Agricultural Policy, the rural payments system that costs more than 40bn euros (£32bn) a year. | |
The proposals are aimed at making farmers more responsive to market forces amid rapidly rising food prices. | |
They aim to scrap milk quotas and give farmers incentives to look after the countryside rather than producing food. | |
EU agriculture boss Mariann Fischer Boel wants to minimise the distortion to food markets the subsidies create. | |
The draft policy requires approval by all 27 EU member states and the European Parliament. | The draft policy requires approval by all 27 EU member states and the European Parliament. |
ON THE AGENDA End to subsidies for major landownersEnd to "set-aside" - practice of paying farmers to leave land fallowPhasing out milk quotasMoney to be redirected to rural development and green programme class="" href="/1/hi/sci/tech/7409273.stm">Europe's farming future debated class="" href="http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/nol/thread.jspa?forumID=4817&edition=1">Send us your comments | |
Proposals | |
The plan calls for milk quotas to be gradually increased, then scrapped by 2015. | |
But the biggest change would be to progressively cut subsidies to wealthy farms, and shift the money saved to protect and promote traditional family farms. | |
For 2009, subsides for farms receiving 99,999 euros would be reduced by 7%, and by 16% for those receiving more than 300,000 euros a year. | |
The funds would be used by member states to invest in environmentally-friendly programmes, including renewable energy sources and water management. | |
The amount of land a farmer has to own to be eligible for aid would also rise. | |
At the moment, that stands at 0.3 hectares, less than the size of a football field. | |
The Commission says the administrative cost of dealing with the smallest properties is often more than the subsidy itself. | |
'Safety net' | |
The UK has urged the EU to go much further and get rid of direct payments to farmers altogether. | The UK has urged the EU to go much further and get rid of direct payments to farmers altogether. |
One French farmer told the BBC the subsidies should stay as a safety net. | One French farmer told the BBC the subsidies should stay as a safety net. |
"Our prices are very high now so we don't need anything, any safety net," said Langlois Berthelou. | "Our prices are very high now so we don't need anything, any safety net," said Langlois Berthelou. |
"But when the price will get back down ... we will not have any more efficient tool. | |
"We don't have to forget that in Europe we have very heavy burden with all the environmental and labour legislation which farmers around the world, in some other parts, don't have." |