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Welsh Government announces changes to controversial farming payment scheme

Farmers will no longer be asked to have a minimum of 10% tree cover on their land.

Claire Hayhurst
Monday 25 November 2024 11:26 GMT
Farmers protested against the scheme at the Senedd in February (Andrew Matthews/PA)
Farmers protested against the scheme at the Senedd in February (Andrew Matthews/PA) (PA Archive)

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Farmers in Wales will not be expected to have a minimum of 10% tree cover on their land, after changes to a controversial subsidy scheme.

Huw Irranca-Davies, the deputy first minister of Wales, confirmed a number of changes to the Welsh Governmentā€™s controversial sustainable farming scheme.

The scheme, which resulted in thousands of farmers protesting outside the Welsh Parliament in Cardiff Bay in February, was widely criticised by opposition parties and farming leaders.

Mr Irranca-Davies said changes to the scheme addressed the needs of Welsh farmers while supporting sustainable production of food, as well as climate change and nature commitments.

Speaking from the Royal Welsh Winter Fair, he said: ā€œFollowing the consultation, it was clear changes were needed, we said we would listen and weā€™ve done just that.

We are developing a scheme which is designed to support all farmers in Wales, based on the completion of a set of universal actions

Huw Irranca-Davies, deputy first minister of Wales

ā€œFarmers are at the heart of communities right across Wales, and they play a crucial role in our economy and food production.

ā€œAs stewards of our land, they also have a key role to play in protecting and restoring nature and tackling the climate emergency.ā€

Changes to the scheme include the removal of a farm-level figure for tree cover, which will be replaced with a scheme-wide target.

A spokesman said: ā€œFarmers will therefore no longer be asked to have a minimum of 10% tree cover on their land.ā€

Farmers who apply for the scheme will be able to decide where they want to add more trees or hedges on their farm and how many, with funding to support them through the optional part of the scheme.

However, farmers will still be required to manage at least 10% of their farm as habitat.

The Welsh Government is now considering options to create temporary habitat to help farmers meet this requirement, which should be suitable for all farming systems and land ownership.

Actions relating to animal health, welfare and biosecurity have been merged to focus discussions with the farm vet on improved health and welfare outcomes, the spokesman added.

The scheme had included a requirement for all farms to have wash stations, where equipment is cleaned, but this is now optional.

Additional payments will be made for social value under the universal part of the scheme, representing the ā€œwider benefits which come from a sustainable agricultural industryā€, the Welsh Government said.

Mr Irranca-Davies added that the updates represented ā€œsignificant progressā€ but they were not the final scheme, with a decision to be made on this next summer.

Details of payment rates will not be provided until then.

ā€œWe are developing a scheme which is designed to support all farmers in Wales, based on the completion of a set of universal actions,ā€ he said.

ā€œThese actions will be familiar to farmers in Wales, whether beef, dairy, arable, upland, lowland, extensive or intensive. They are actions many of them take on a day-to-day basis.ā€

He said the scheme would support the ā€œeconomic resilienceā€ of farming businesses, the sustainable production of food, as well as climate and nature objectives, and rural communities.

ā€œWeā€™ve come a long way and there is still more work to do,ā€ he added.

NFU Cymru president Aled Jones, speaking at the Royal Welsh Winter Fair, said it welcomed the ā€œpartnership approachā€ Mr Irranca-Davies had put in place to listen to the concerns of the farming industry.

The union has been involved with the ministerial roundtable and sub-groups.

Mr Jones added: ā€œWelsh Government has confirmed this is not the final scheme design and Welsh ministers have not made any final decisions.

ā€œNFU Cymru is pleased that Welsh Government has committed to undertake economic analysis and an impact assessment of the revised proposals to understand what the scheme will mean for farmers and wider society.ā€

He called for the new scheme to provide ā€œthe same level of stabilityā€ to farm businesses, rural communities and the supply chain as the current basic payment scheme.

ā€œThere is much more work to do in the coming months on the final scheme detail as well as a number of fundamental aspects of scheme design including the payment methodology and payment rates ahead of the publication of the final scheme, expected in July 2025,ā€ he added.

ā€œSecuring Welsh Governmentā€™s commitment to a well-funded, multi-annual budget for the scheme that matches the scale of our ambition for sustainable growth of the food and farming sector, alongside the delivery of key environmental outcomes for society, is also going to be crucial.

ā€œWe have seen the budget for farming eroded by inflation and subjected to in-year cuts. The need to restore and enhance the budget cannot be overstated.ā€

Mr Jones added that there was a ā€œhuge amount of work to be done on many aspects of the schemeā€.

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