Once again throwing out into the twitter-sphere: there hasn't been a £400m cut to the farming budget - it's pretty stable in actual terms at £2.3bn across the next 4 years - and actually the nature-friendly bit of it has gotten a massive boost
Now there's important questions on what this gets spent on. A £2.3bn budget means there's space for all the schemes, and more farmers should be able to get into schemes soon. But who, what, when are all questions defra needs a clear plan on soon!
Actually the farming budget is broadly the same at £2.3bn for next 3 yrs. (Last year spend was more like £2.4bn but it's really rounding error territory). This is a positive outcome following environment and farming groups uniting to campaign against feared cuts
Cuts to nature friendly farming budget confirmed: Defra claims the fund will "skyrocket" from £800m in 23/24 to £2bn in 28/29. However, the entire farming payments budget including the EU acreage payments which were being phased out was £2.4bn, so looks like £400m a year cut.
On top, there's £400m for "additional nature schemes" which looks largely like a continuation of the Nature for Climate fund, but maybe it's a bit smaller and something else has been lumped in there? But all in all pretty positive
What does this mean for farmers? It's about changing the balance of land uses, not everything. Maybe a smaller herd & a larger wood.
& there's profit to be had: the most profitable 1/4 of small grazing livestock farms have 30% less livestock per hectare, but 60% more profit
Dont buy the hype. Here's 3 reasons why the diet change the CCC are recommending isnt that big a deal, & a few more why it's entirely sensible for a govt wanting to grow the economy and improve public health
So this isnt just about emissions, it's about families being able to afford to feed their children a healthy diet. There's not a level playing field. Unhealthy food is constantly pushed at us in adverts & promos. That has to change for the sake of our health, and for the climate.
🚨GA event on 5th Feb "What do farmers still need from the agricultural transition?". Sign up at the link! Ft a speech from the minister Daniel Zeichner and a great panel discussion of experts and farmers https://t.co/BVmbr52t7B
A food strategy must provide better access to healthy, affordable food, tackle the environmental impacts of production, and support farms to deliver public goods alongside food. For all of this & more, govt should look to Dimbleby's https://t.co/orqUCdlb2H
Very exciting to hear Defra SoS Steve Reed announce today govt will produce a new food strategy.
Promising to hear the level of cross-govt buy in including from PM, No 10, health, education and business.
We look forward to hearing more on the timelines & the "co-created" process.
Interested in our 'Alternative proteins – what’s in it for farmers & land use?' webinar 11/09? (https://t.co/uzrEZPEAyp) Check out some background reading co-authored by 1 of our speakers @LydiaCollas on the opportunity of alternative proteins in Europe https://t.co/kdKioQy0pC
Congratulations to @SteveReedMP on becoming the new @DefraGovUK secretary of state. We look forward to working with the department on the #EnvironmentAct targets promised in the Labour manifesto. It can be done and here’s how. 👇
“The government committed us to reduce emissions and to restore nature, and that creates this opportunity” to improve lives in rural areas, says @lydiacollas on @BBCFarmingToday.
Rural seats are election battlegrounds, so politicians are taking notice.
https://t.co/cBq7fW5x3C