Tuesday 6 April 2010

PLETHORA OF POLICIES PROMPTS CALLS FOR SIMPLIFICATION - says NFUS

NFU Scotland has called on rural policymakers, agricultural advisers and researchers to play their part in co-ordinating the plethora of policies being directed at Scotland’s farmers into simple, clear and concise messages.

Closing the SAC/SEPA Biennial Conference in Edinburgh, NFUS Head of Rural Policy Jonnie Hall said that farmers were increasingly bogged down by the policy demands being made of them and that it was becoming more difficult to get on with the real job of farming and producing food.

Mr Hall said:

“The reality of farming in Scotland is that decision-making at farm level is too often driven by the need to meet policy demands rather than responding to market signals. If we want this nation’s farmers to provide a safe, local supply of food, preserve our countryside, support local communities and underpin associated industries then we need a more co-ordinated policy framework that allows that to happen rather than tie it up in knots.

“A quick scan of the paperwork lying on a farmer’s desk could see that business having to tackle the bureaucracy related to items such as Single Farm Payments, cross-compliance, LFA support, pollution prevention, nitrates, rural development schemes, waste regulations and the list goes on.

“When you throw into the mix the demands on the farming industry to play a part in delivering on the environment, biodiversity, climate change, forestry, a national food policy, flood risk management and a soils strategy then suddenly there are umpteen expectations on farmers, some of which are clearly conflicting.

“There is such a raft of policy drivers being directed towards the industry at this time that it is almost impossible for any individual farmer to know exactly what is being asked of them. We have limited resources at the disposal of Scottish Agriculture plc and we need to recognise that farmers still have to make a living from farming and producing food. Under the current weight of policy expectation, something has got to give.

“The challenge for policymakers, researchers and advisers is to drive a much greater degree of simplicity and coherence into policymaking in the future so that farmers more readily know what is expected of them. Where there is conflict across policies, such as the current food production versus forestry debate, then there has to be recognition that there needs to be a trade-off or a compromise position.

“There is an urgent need for policymakers to align the current plethora of policies in a more co-ordinated manner in the knowledge that if we get the policy framework right, then farmers will respond to it and deliver on their part.”