Northern farmers ask Johnson for £300m to replace CAP payments

Estimates suggest that the majority of farmers rely on EU payments for at least 60% of farm income

Even with CAP payments, farm income levels in the North “fell by 26 per cent in real terms” from £386m in 2018 to £290m  in 2019, according to the North’s Department of Agriculture.  Photograph: iStock
Even with CAP payments, farm income levels in the North “fell by 26 per cent in real terms” from £386m in 2018 to £290m in 2019, according to the North’s Department of Agriculture. Photograph: iStock

Farm businesses in the North need the UK government to provide them with at least £300 million (€357m) a year to replace the funding they will lose after Brexit, farming leaders in Northern Ireland have warned.

The latest figures from Northern Ireland’s Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs show that 23,609 farm businesses shared £281 million in financial support under the EU’s Common Agriculture Policy (CAP) last year.

It is estimated that the majority of farm businesses in the North have up to this month relied on CAP payments for more than 60 per cent of their total farm income each year.

Ivor Ferguson, president of the Ulster Farmers’ Union, said that without this continued level of financial subsidy many farming families in the North would struggle.

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According to Mr Ferguson, the CAP payments were not universally liked by all farmers in the North because they favoured some sectors over others. However for many farm businesses they were a vital source of income.

Even with CAP payments, farm income levels in the North “fell by 26 per cent in real terms” from £386 million in 2018 to £290 million in 2019, according to the Department of Agriculture.

Mr Ferguson said:”Farmers cannot afford any drop in financial support, and in fact they may need extra funding because farmers could find themselves facing extra costs depending on what comes out of Boris Johnson’s trade deal.

“Remember more than 50 per cent of everything we produce in Northern Ireland goes to the GB market, but will unfettered access mean extra costs? Farmers are also very worried about potential trade deals between the UK and for example the United States or Australia that could result in an influx of lower quality cheaper food, and we just couldn’t compete with that.”

He said the farming community in the North expected “big changes” over the next 11 months because of Brexit, and the lack of clarity on future financial support was a big concern.

Mr Ferguson said the substantial decline in farm incomes last year highlighted “the unsustainable financial situation that farm families across Northern Ireland endured last year”.

“We want the UK government to ring-fence a financial support package for agriculture in Northern Ireland. We have the support of Northern Ireland politicians, and we have the advantage that the Northern Ireland Assembly will back the farming community.”

Francess McDonnell

Francess McDonnell

Francess McDonnell is a contributor to The Irish Times specialising in business