Europe fears cutting farm aid will result in abandoned farms in remote areas

By 
Reuters
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: February 1, 2013

Reducing farm supports and moving toward a more market-oriented farm policy is raising fears that remote communities will wither, according to a member of the European Parliament’s agriculture committee.

“There are genuine fears about land abandonment, village decline and a lack of young people in remote parts of the EU,” said Mairead McGuinness.

Policies such as the planned abolition of milk quotas in 2015 are causing concerns among some European parliamentarians, who fear milk production will end in disadvantaged regions, she said. European Union leaders were unable to reach agreement late last year on a budget for the 2014-20 period.

Read Also

Hay bales in a field in Wainwright, Alberta, in August 2025.

Alberta has adequate feed supplies going into winter

Hay yields across Alberta were varied, but one expert says feed supplies are in strong supply for Alberta producers for the upcoming winter.

“Our real dilemma is that we do not know with any certainty how much money will be available for the CAP (Common Agricultural Policy) budget post-2013, and more alarmingly we fear that cuts to rural development will be deep,” she said.

Owen Paterson, Britain’s farming and environment minister, said his country is the second-largest net contributor after Germany and needs spending cuts as it is borrowing an estimated 400,000 pounds ($651,400) a minute.

“Until we starting growing wealth again, we are going to be reducing these programs,” he said.

About the author

Reuters

The news and media division of Thomson Reuters.

explore

Stories from our other publications