EU states agree farm policy review as tractors throng Brussels

Published March 27, 2024
Brussels: Smoke rises as farmers demonstrate outside the EU headquarters, where the bloc’s agriculture ministers were holding a meeting.—AFP
Brussels: Smoke rises as farmers demonstrate outside the EU headquarters, where the bloc’s agriculture ministers were holding a meeting.—AFP

BRUSSELS: EU member states on Tuesday agreed to unpick more eco-friendly requirements under the bloc’s common agricultural policy (CAP) in a new bid to pacify months-long protests by farmers — who rolled hundreds of tractors into Brussels to vent their grievances.

A special committee endorsed the review to be debated by agriculture ministers meeting in Brussels as farmers thronged the city’s European quarter for the third time in two months, setting fire to tyres and bales of hay, and throwing eggs at riot police.

“We have listened to our farmers and we have taken swift action to address their concerns at a time when they are confronted with numerous challenges,” said David Clarinval, deputy prime minister of Belgium, which holds the rotating EU presidency.

He said the revision aims to slash red tape for farmers and give them more flexibility complying with green regulations while also “maintaining a high level of environmental ambition”.

The committee backed a proposal from the European Commission to change a set of environmental and climate standards that determine whether farmers can receive CAP subsidies. A key change involves granting leeway to farmers who fail to meet CAP requirements because of extreme weather.

The revision does away entirely with the obligation to leave a share of arable land fallow -- a measure aimed at protecting soils and promoting biodiversity but a major gripe for farmers. But they would still be incentivised to do so.

Published in Dawn, March 27th, 2024

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