The Common Agricultural Policy 2014-2020:  proposals from the European Commission David Barnes/Drew Sloan Dec 2011 - Jan 2012
Purpose of these meetings To inform you about the European proposals for the future CAP So that you can begin to think about preparing for it To set out Scottish Government’s views at this stage To hear your informal views and comments And to enable you to give us well-informed formal feedback via our consultation exercises.
Caveats Some things still need clarification from the Commission. Everything in the proposals is subject to change in the negotiations. The consultation exercise is designed to inform SG’s final position, so what we set out tonight is just an interim position. How the new CAP will be implemented in Scotland will be the subject of a separate consultation process nearer the time.
What tonight will cover Introduction/background: Procedure Budget Timetable The content of the European proposals: Pillar 1 Pillar 2 Issues common to both pillars Next steps Q&A
Introduction The EU is negotiating its budget and policies for 2014-2020. Three EU institutions are involved:  European Commission Council of Ministers European Parliament Only the European Commission can table a proposal: focus tonight is on the Commission’s proposals for the CAP. Council of Ministers and European Parliament then negotiate and decide.
CAP Budget and CAP rules will be decided separately CAP budget will be considered alongside the rest of EU budget, by Finance Ministers and Heads of Government. CAP rules will be negotiated and decided by Agriculture Ministers and the European Parliament.
CAP budget Commission proposal is roughly a “flat cash” budget for CAP 2014-2020, which means a decline in value in real terms (no uplift for inflation). Commission proposes redistribution of the budget, to boost Pillar 1 payments in new Member States and to make Pillar 2 fairer.
Pillar 1 Direct Payments budget Commission proposal for “convergence” to help new Member States:  those below 90% of EU average €/ha get an uplift. Proposed UK Direct Payments ceiling is slightly down.  Within-UK allocations not yet known. Scotland’s average €/ha is as low as some new Member States.
Pillar 2 Rural Development budget Commission proposes to use more objective criteria than in the past to allocate Member State shares. UK allocation not yet known. Criteria should lead to bigger percentage shares of the EU RD budget for UK and Scotland. Total RD budget in Scotland 2014-2020 will also depend on how big the EU RD budget is, and how much national co-financing money is available.
CAP rules What’s happened so far: 2009-2010 gathering ideas - Commission consultation exercise, Council discussions, Lyon report. Pack Inquiry into future farm support. Nov 2010 Commission options paper.  Council discussions, Dess report. Oct 2011 Commission issues formal proposals designed to meet its objectives.
Two Pillars, four regulations Pillar 1 Direct Payments Market measures (“Single CMO”) Pillar 2 Rural Development (“RDR”) Financing and monitoring  (“Horizontal” regulation) EU implementing rules (“Delegated Acts”)
Commission’s ideal timetable CAP proposals issue 12 October 2011. EU and CAP budgets decided summer 2012. CAP regulations finalised end 2012 or early 2013. EU-level and Member State-level implementing rules and legislation adopted during 2013. New regime 1 Jan 2014.
If the timetable slips Pillar 1 Direct Payments and Market Measures – status quo could essentially continue until the new system begins, Eg on 1 Jan 2015. Pillar 2 Rural Development Programmes – risk of a gap between current programmes and new ones unless “bridging” arrangements are agreed.
Content of the EU proposals Pillar 1 Direct Payments Next slides from the Commission’s own presentation:
 
Who would have entitlements under the proposals  ? All current entitlements would expire. Entitlements under the new system would be allocated to: farmers who are actively farming in 2014 and submit a claim,  and  who activated at least one SFP entitlement in 2011. and people eligible for the National Reserve.
National Reserve Funded by one-off deduction of up to 3% of Scotland’s total Direct Payments. Priority given to farmers under 40 who started farming in the last 5 years.  If necessary to meet this demand, the 3% can be increased.
Who is an active farmer ? Direct Payments must be at least 5% of non-agricultural income (unless Direct Payments <€5,000). Must grow crops/keep livestock; or keep the land in condition suitable for grazing or cultivation. Member States/regions can impose minimum activity on land which remains in good condition even without management. Minimum claim size and hectarage.
1.  Basic Payment What’s left after the various deductions have been made. Can be regionalised, on objective criteria. In 2014, 40% of the Basic Payment ceiling is area-based.  Remainder shared out according to historic SFP. By 2019, must be 100% area-based and all entitlements within a region must be equal. Transition profile fixed in advance, in 2013.
2.  Greening If >3ha of cropping, minimum 3 crops each covering >5% and <70%. Permanent grassland (>5yrs) must be maintained as declared in 2014. Each holding must have Ecological Focus Area (buffer strips, landscape features, fallow etc) equal to 7% of arable and temporary grass area. Organic farming qualifies automatically.
3.  Young farmer top-up Compulsory for Member States. 25% top-up per hectare, up to a limit on hectares. Limit must be set between 25ha and average holding size in UK (54ha). Under 40, and max. 5 years after establishment. Up to 2% of Scotland’s total Direct Payments.
4.  Coupled support Voluntary for Member States/regions. Replaces Article 68  and  pre-SFP schemes (SCPS, SAPS etc) which some member States are still using. Limited to fixed no. animals and to payment rates necessary to maintain current production. Up to 5% of total Direct Payments, except for Member States currently using >5%.
5.  Area of Natural Constraint (ANC) top-up ANC = new designation for LFA Top-up voluntary for Member States/regions. Up to 5% of total Direct Payments. Payable on all or part of ANC, according to objective criteria. Must be deducted from Pillar 2 ANC support (LFASS).
Progressive reductions/capping Payments reduced by: 20% from €150,000 to €200,000  40% from €200,000 to €250,000  70% from €250,000 to €300,000  100% above €300,000  Salaries/employment costs are deducted. Greening payments are exempt.  Proceeds used in Pillar 2 for innovation.
Small farmer scheme Compulsory for Member States, optional for the farmer (one-off decision in 2014). Up to 10% of total Direct Payments. Fixed payment, between €500 and €1,000. Replaces other payments inc. coupled payments. Minimum no. hectares. Exempt from greening and from cross-compliance penalties.
Pillar 1 Market measures EU has moved from permanent intervention in the market to safety-net only. Provision for emergency measures in the event of extreme market disruption. Milk quotas already being phased out, sugar quotas proposed to be phased out.
Pillar 2 Rural Development:  current rules 7-year programmes approved by Commission. Co-financed by EU and domestic money. Axis 1 farm business development (capital, skills). Axis 2 agri-environment (capital and annual), LFA, woodlands, animal welfare. Axis 3 diversification and community projects. LEADER.
Pillar 2 Rural Development:  proposals for 2014-2020 Evolution not revolution. Common Strategic Framework – joined-up approach between RD, EU Structural Funds and EU Fisheries Fund.  No Axes, no minimum percentages except 25% of EU funds on environment (inc. organic and LFA).  Possibility for sub-programmes within RDPs.
Less Favoured Areas Re-titled Areas of Natural Constraint (ANC).  Defined as: Mountain areas, or Other areas meeting biophysical criteria (now defined by EU not Member State), or Other areas facing specific constraints (eg islands), up to 10% of total area. No special budget for each category, but different maximum rates.
“ Other areas” biophysical criteria Temperature, soil quality, slope, wetness or dryness. Close to criteria used already to define LFA in Scotland, but less fine-grained: applies to whole ward or parish if 66% of area meets the criteria.
ANC payments Costs incurred or income foregone as a result of natural constraints, compared with non-constrained areas. Take account of Pillar 1 ANC top-up. Minimum €25/ha, maximum €250/ha (€300/ha for Mountain), degressive above a threshold. Transition arrangements for farmers excluded by the new criteria.
Common rules to Pillars 1 and 2 Cross-compliance Rules to be followed by Member States (inspections, audit, financial reporting etc): not covered tonight.
Cross-compliance As at present, two elements: Statutory Management Requirements (SMRs) and  Good Agricultural and Environmental Condition (GAEC).
Statutory Management Requirements (SMRs) EU legislation on environment, animal and plant health, public health, animal welfare, which farmers should be complying with anyway. Down from 18 to 13 (15 when Water Framework Directive and Sustainable Use of Pesticides Directive have been implemented).  Some animal health SMRs removed.
Good Agricultural and Environmental Condition (GAEC) 8 requirements (previously 8 compulsory + 6 optional). Retention of permanent pasture removed from GAEC: moved to greening. Minimum stocking density removed from GAEC: moved to agricultural activity definition. New GAEC: “Protection of wetland and carbon rich soils including a ban on first ploughing”
Cross-compliance penalties Take account of severity, extent and timescale.  As at present: Penalty can be waived if “minor” non-compliance (but not if risk to public or animal health). Negligence: up to 5%, or 15% if repeated. Intentional: 20% to 100%. Detailed rules set by Commission.
Next steps: Scotland Consultation on Pillar 1, Dec to Feb. Already consulted widely on Direct Payments for Pack Inquiry, and we need rapid information on stakeholder views.  Questionnaire on SG website, with hard copy alternative. Pillar 2, separate approach, including links with Common Strategic Framework. These consultations are to inform the negotiating position.  Separate exercises later to decide how to implement.
Commission proposal Parliament 1st reading Council 1st reading Parliament 2nd reading Council 2nd reading Conciliation procedure NEXT STEPS:  EU By end-2012 or  early 2013 ??!
Then: EU implementing rules Local implementation decisions. Local implementation.
Questions

More Related Content

PDF
EU, Odluka o EMS, 9.12.2011.
PDF
Comunicado del consejo de europa cumbre del 9 de dic 2011
PDF
Policy framework for budget norms implementation (Laos: June 2009)
PDF
13.04.2013, Brief Introduction on Mining Policy, Ch. Otgonchuluu
PDF
The EU and Lebanon
PDF
Budgeting in France - Delphine MORETTI, OECD
PDF
The Italian Budget Cycle
PDF
Six pack
EU, Odluka o EMS, 9.12.2011.
Comunicado del consejo de europa cumbre del 9 de dic 2011
Policy framework for budget norms implementation (Laos: June 2009)
13.04.2013, Brief Introduction on Mining Policy, Ch. Otgonchuluu
The EU and Lebanon
Budgeting in France - Delphine MORETTI, OECD
The Italian Budget Cycle
Six pack

What's hot (18)

PDF
VIETNAM - FUEL MARKETS AND FUEL AUCTIONS - IMPACT ON ECONOMY
PDF
Budgeting in Bulgaria - Emil NURGALIEV, Bulgaria
PDF
Memo 15-3221 en
PDF
Medium term budgetary frameworks - Brian FINN, OECD
PPSX
Julian Kelly, HM Treasury
PDF
Grcki predlog
PDF
Memorando troika 04 05-2011
PDF
Prior action-final-version-july-2015
PDF
Codice di Condotta del Psc
PDF
Public finance
PDF
Statement eurogruppo
PDF
EU: THE EXCESSIVE DEBT PROCEDURE
PPTX
Lao PDR: Readiness to Engage in PPPs in the Agricultural Sector
PDF
OECD, 10th Meeting of CESEE Senior Budget Officials - Bojan Paunovic, Montenegro
PPSX
Union Budget 2015-16
PPSX
David Lamberti, Cabinet Office
PDF
Pismo o namerama Vlade R.Srbije MMF februar 2015 (eng)
PDF
VIETNAM – SOLAR POWER – LATEST NEWS ON FEED IN TARIFF AND FIT-ELIGIBILITY – W...
VIETNAM - FUEL MARKETS AND FUEL AUCTIONS - IMPACT ON ECONOMY
Budgeting in Bulgaria - Emil NURGALIEV, Bulgaria
Memo 15-3221 en
Medium term budgetary frameworks - Brian FINN, OECD
Julian Kelly, HM Treasury
Grcki predlog
Memorando troika 04 05-2011
Prior action-final-version-july-2015
Codice di Condotta del Psc
Public finance
Statement eurogruppo
EU: THE EXCESSIVE DEBT PROCEDURE
Lao PDR: Readiness to Engage in PPPs in the Agricultural Sector
OECD, 10th Meeting of CESEE Senior Budget Officials - Bojan Paunovic, Montenegro
Union Budget 2015-16
David Lamberti, Cabinet Office
Pismo o namerama Vlade R.Srbije MMF februar 2015 (eng)
VIETNAM – SOLAR POWER – LATEST NEWS ON FEED IN TARIFF AND FIT-ELIGIBILITY – W...
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PDF
Midgard and the Interactive Knowledge System
PPT
Projektõppe olemus, läbiviimise etapid, veebivahendid
PDF
Macromedia Dreamweaver
PPT
SMS Werk
PPT
Eunivoru07
PPT
Welcome To Technology
PPT
Il kit del perfetto tesista
PPTX
Classification
PPT
LACA Foundation in El Salvador
PPTX
Presentation on UDHC for UC Tertiary Engagement Summit (Draft Slides)
PDF
Sotsiaalvorgudkorgkoolis embassy
PPT
Targetexperience
KEY
Why Social Media Fails - Questions Slide
PPT
Projektõpe eTwinning suvekoolis
PPT
Matikute kogukonna portaali kasutamine
PPT
Puutetahvli kasutamine matemaatika õpetamisel
PPT
fotitos
PPT
Globalgiving
PPT
Tc fake money
 
ODP
Collaboratief doehetzelven
Midgard and the Interactive Knowledge System
Projektõppe olemus, läbiviimise etapid, veebivahendid
Macromedia Dreamweaver
SMS Werk
Eunivoru07
Welcome To Technology
Il kit del perfetto tesista
Classification
LACA Foundation in El Salvador
Presentation on UDHC for UC Tertiary Engagement Summit (Draft Slides)
Sotsiaalvorgudkorgkoolis embassy
Targetexperience
Why Social Media Fails - Questions Slide
Projektõpe eTwinning suvekoolis
Matikute kogukonna portaali kasutamine
Puutetahvli kasutamine matemaatika õpetamisel
fotitos
Globalgiving
Tc fake money
 
Collaboratief doehetzelven
Ad

Similar to CAP reform proposals (20)

PDF
Παρουσίαση1
PDF
The new Common Agricultural Policy (CAP): Sustainability and Innovation. Mar...
PPTX
Taxed into a corner - The Chancellor’s options in the upcoming Budget
PPTX
Pierre Bascou, DG AGRI - The new system of direct support, implementation and...
PDF
The ABC of the CRC Phase 2
PDF
The ABC of the CRC Phase 2
PPT
Climate Change Act Briefing
PDF
13 the ciolos reform
PDF
Espagne jose luis iranzo alquezar
PDF
Slideshare -the_abc_of_the_crc_phase_2_energy_team
PDF
Post-budget briefing: Tax and welfare measures in Budget 2020
PDF
2020 climate & energy package
PPT
Opportunities and risks in carbon markets final
PDF
Biodiversity workshop, May 2025, Hadrien Michel
PPT
Long version natavan aliyeva
PDF
Italy. Macroeconomic policy. The Letta Cabinet in its first two months
PDF
How the OBR uses WGA for long-term sustainability analysis - Philippa Todd, U...
PDF
A Post-Budget 2018 Analysis of the Irish Public Finances
PDF
CAP reform approved by the Council: press release
PDF
OECD-UNDP Conference on Biodiversity Finance - Session 3 Kai Schlegelmich, Fe...
Παρουσίαση1
The new Common Agricultural Policy (CAP): Sustainability and Innovation. Mar...
Taxed into a corner - The Chancellor’s options in the upcoming Budget
Pierre Bascou, DG AGRI - The new system of direct support, implementation and...
The ABC of the CRC Phase 2
The ABC of the CRC Phase 2
Climate Change Act Briefing
13 the ciolos reform
Espagne jose luis iranzo alquezar
Slideshare -the_abc_of_the_crc_phase_2_energy_team
Post-budget briefing: Tax and welfare measures in Budget 2020
2020 climate & energy package
Opportunities and risks in carbon markets final
Biodiversity workshop, May 2025, Hadrien Michel
Long version natavan aliyeva
Italy. Macroeconomic policy. The Letta Cabinet in its first two months
How the OBR uses WGA for long-term sustainability analysis - Philippa Todd, U...
A Post-Budget 2018 Analysis of the Irish Public Finances
CAP reform approved by the Council: press release
OECD-UNDP Conference on Biodiversity Finance - Session 3 Kai Schlegelmich, Fe...

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
FIRANGI_ZARBZAN_AND_RUM_DASTURI_THE_OTTO.pdf
PPTX
INTRODUCTION TO WORLD RELIGION WEEK 1 Quarter 1
PDF
19082025_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
PPTX
Syrian ongoing Civil War it's origi s and effects.pptx
PPTX
History Of India.and its significats to the worldpptx
PPTX
Flood Disaster in Buner, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
PPTX
The Changing World Order-From G7 Dominance to BRICS Emergence.pptx
PDF
Lipulekh Pass Despite Nepal’s Objection.pdf
PPTX
Bruce Green and Muhammad Yoefikar.pptx new 2025
DOCX
Finding the Best Website for Cryptocurrency News in 2025
PPTX
Starlink to Use Aadhaar for Customer Verification in India.pptx
PPTX
CIVIL-SOCIETY-AND-NON-GOVERNMENTAL-ORGANIZATIONS.pptx
PPTX
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard Announces Sweeping Reforms.pptx
PDF
18082025_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
PPTX
15 Years of Fraud The Shocking Case of CA Impersonation.pptx
DOCX
Memecoinist Insights: The Best Meme Coins 2025, Trump Predictions, and AI Wal...
PPTX
Taimour Zaman Fraud and Josue Daniel Ortiz Borjas..pptx
PPTX
politics and the day to day trading and power of government
PDF
Reviving Regional Truths: AI-Powered Journalism in Bangladesh
PPTX
Vietnam’s Ambassador Cruise II Takes Out Two National Records.
FIRANGI_ZARBZAN_AND_RUM_DASTURI_THE_OTTO.pdf
INTRODUCTION TO WORLD RELIGION WEEK 1 Quarter 1
19082025_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
Syrian ongoing Civil War it's origi s and effects.pptx
History Of India.and its significats to the worldpptx
Flood Disaster in Buner, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
The Changing World Order-From G7 Dominance to BRICS Emergence.pptx
Lipulekh Pass Despite Nepal’s Objection.pdf
Bruce Green and Muhammad Yoefikar.pptx new 2025
Finding the Best Website for Cryptocurrency News in 2025
Starlink to Use Aadhaar for Customer Verification in India.pptx
CIVIL-SOCIETY-AND-NON-GOVERNMENTAL-ORGANIZATIONS.pptx
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard Announces Sweeping Reforms.pptx
18082025_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
15 Years of Fraud The Shocking Case of CA Impersonation.pptx
Memecoinist Insights: The Best Meme Coins 2025, Trump Predictions, and AI Wal...
Taimour Zaman Fraud and Josue Daniel Ortiz Borjas..pptx
politics and the day to day trading and power of government
Reviving Regional Truths: AI-Powered Journalism in Bangladesh
Vietnam’s Ambassador Cruise II Takes Out Two National Records.

CAP reform proposals

  • 1. The Common Agricultural Policy 2014-2020: proposals from the European Commission David Barnes/Drew Sloan Dec 2011 - Jan 2012
  • 2. Purpose of these meetings To inform you about the European proposals for the future CAP So that you can begin to think about preparing for it To set out Scottish Government’s views at this stage To hear your informal views and comments And to enable you to give us well-informed formal feedback via our consultation exercises.
  • 3. Caveats Some things still need clarification from the Commission. Everything in the proposals is subject to change in the negotiations. The consultation exercise is designed to inform SG’s final position, so what we set out tonight is just an interim position. How the new CAP will be implemented in Scotland will be the subject of a separate consultation process nearer the time.
  • 4. What tonight will cover Introduction/background: Procedure Budget Timetable The content of the European proposals: Pillar 1 Pillar 2 Issues common to both pillars Next steps Q&A
  • 5. Introduction The EU is negotiating its budget and policies for 2014-2020. Three EU institutions are involved: European Commission Council of Ministers European Parliament Only the European Commission can table a proposal: focus tonight is on the Commission’s proposals for the CAP. Council of Ministers and European Parliament then negotiate and decide.
  • 6. CAP Budget and CAP rules will be decided separately CAP budget will be considered alongside the rest of EU budget, by Finance Ministers and Heads of Government. CAP rules will be negotiated and decided by Agriculture Ministers and the European Parliament.
  • 7. CAP budget Commission proposal is roughly a “flat cash” budget for CAP 2014-2020, which means a decline in value in real terms (no uplift for inflation). Commission proposes redistribution of the budget, to boost Pillar 1 payments in new Member States and to make Pillar 2 fairer.
  • 8. Pillar 1 Direct Payments budget Commission proposal for “convergence” to help new Member States: those below 90% of EU average €/ha get an uplift. Proposed UK Direct Payments ceiling is slightly down. Within-UK allocations not yet known. Scotland’s average €/ha is as low as some new Member States.
  • 9. Pillar 2 Rural Development budget Commission proposes to use more objective criteria than in the past to allocate Member State shares. UK allocation not yet known. Criteria should lead to bigger percentage shares of the EU RD budget for UK and Scotland. Total RD budget in Scotland 2014-2020 will also depend on how big the EU RD budget is, and how much national co-financing money is available.
  • 10. CAP rules What’s happened so far: 2009-2010 gathering ideas - Commission consultation exercise, Council discussions, Lyon report. Pack Inquiry into future farm support. Nov 2010 Commission options paper. Council discussions, Dess report. Oct 2011 Commission issues formal proposals designed to meet its objectives.
  • 11. Two Pillars, four regulations Pillar 1 Direct Payments Market measures (“Single CMO”) Pillar 2 Rural Development (“RDR”) Financing and monitoring (“Horizontal” regulation) EU implementing rules (“Delegated Acts”)
  • 12. Commission’s ideal timetable CAP proposals issue 12 October 2011. EU and CAP budgets decided summer 2012. CAP regulations finalised end 2012 or early 2013. EU-level and Member State-level implementing rules and legislation adopted during 2013. New regime 1 Jan 2014.
  • 13. If the timetable slips Pillar 1 Direct Payments and Market Measures – status quo could essentially continue until the new system begins, Eg on 1 Jan 2015. Pillar 2 Rural Development Programmes – risk of a gap between current programmes and new ones unless “bridging” arrangements are agreed.
  • 14. Content of the EU proposals Pillar 1 Direct Payments Next slides from the Commission’s own presentation:
  • 15.  
  • 16. Who would have entitlements under the proposals ? All current entitlements would expire. Entitlements under the new system would be allocated to: farmers who are actively farming in 2014 and submit a claim, and who activated at least one SFP entitlement in 2011. and people eligible for the National Reserve.
  • 17. National Reserve Funded by one-off deduction of up to 3% of Scotland’s total Direct Payments. Priority given to farmers under 40 who started farming in the last 5 years. If necessary to meet this demand, the 3% can be increased.
  • 18. Who is an active farmer ? Direct Payments must be at least 5% of non-agricultural income (unless Direct Payments <€5,000). Must grow crops/keep livestock; or keep the land in condition suitable for grazing or cultivation. Member States/regions can impose minimum activity on land which remains in good condition even without management. Minimum claim size and hectarage.
  • 19. 1. Basic Payment What’s left after the various deductions have been made. Can be regionalised, on objective criteria. In 2014, 40% of the Basic Payment ceiling is area-based. Remainder shared out according to historic SFP. By 2019, must be 100% area-based and all entitlements within a region must be equal. Transition profile fixed in advance, in 2013.
  • 20. 2. Greening If >3ha of cropping, minimum 3 crops each covering >5% and <70%. Permanent grassland (>5yrs) must be maintained as declared in 2014. Each holding must have Ecological Focus Area (buffer strips, landscape features, fallow etc) equal to 7% of arable and temporary grass area. Organic farming qualifies automatically.
  • 21. 3. Young farmer top-up Compulsory for Member States. 25% top-up per hectare, up to a limit on hectares. Limit must be set between 25ha and average holding size in UK (54ha). Under 40, and max. 5 years after establishment. Up to 2% of Scotland’s total Direct Payments.
  • 22. 4. Coupled support Voluntary for Member States/regions. Replaces Article 68 and pre-SFP schemes (SCPS, SAPS etc) which some member States are still using. Limited to fixed no. animals and to payment rates necessary to maintain current production. Up to 5% of total Direct Payments, except for Member States currently using >5%.
  • 23. 5. Area of Natural Constraint (ANC) top-up ANC = new designation for LFA Top-up voluntary for Member States/regions. Up to 5% of total Direct Payments. Payable on all or part of ANC, according to objective criteria. Must be deducted from Pillar 2 ANC support (LFASS).
  • 24. Progressive reductions/capping Payments reduced by: 20% from €150,000 to €200,000 40% from €200,000 to €250,000 70% from €250,000 to €300,000 100% above €300,000 Salaries/employment costs are deducted. Greening payments are exempt. Proceeds used in Pillar 2 for innovation.
  • 25. Small farmer scheme Compulsory for Member States, optional for the farmer (one-off decision in 2014). Up to 10% of total Direct Payments. Fixed payment, between €500 and €1,000. Replaces other payments inc. coupled payments. Minimum no. hectares. Exempt from greening and from cross-compliance penalties.
  • 26. Pillar 1 Market measures EU has moved from permanent intervention in the market to safety-net only. Provision for emergency measures in the event of extreme market disruption. Milk quotas already being phased out, sugar quotas proposed to be phased out.
  • 27. Pillar 2 Rural Development: current rules 7-year programmes approved by Commission. Co-financed by EU and domestic money. Axis 1 farm business development (capital, skills). Axis 2 agri-environment (capital and annual), LFA, woodlands, animal welfare. Axis 3 diversification and community projects. LEADER.
  • 28. Pillar 2 Rural Development: proposals for 2014-2020 Evolution not revolution. Common Strategic Framework – joined-up approach between RD, EU Structural Funds and EU Fisheries Fund. No Axes, no minimum percentages except 25% of EU funds on environment (inc. organic and LFA). Possibility for sub-programmes within RDPs.
  • 29. Less Favoured Areas Re-titled Areas of Natural Constraint (ANC). Defined as: Mountain areas, or Other areas meeting biophysical criteria (now defined by EU not Member State), or Other areas facing specific constraints (eg islands), up to 10% of total area. No special budget for each category, but different maximum rates.
  • 30. “ Other areas” biophysical criteria Temperature, soil quality, slope, wetness or dryness. Close to criteria used already to define LFA in Scotland, but less fine-grained: applies to whole ward or parish if 66% of area meets the criteria.
  • 31. ANC payments Costs incurred or income foregone as a result of natural constraints, compared with non-constrained areas. Take account of Pillar 1 ANC top-up. Minimum €25/ha, maximum €250/ha (€300/ha for Mountain), degressive above a threshold. Transition arrangements for farmers excluded by the new criteria.
  • 32. Common rules to Pillars 1 and 2 Cross-compliance Rules to be followed by Member States (inspections, audit, financial reporting etc): not covered tonight.
  • 33. Cross-compliance As at present, two elements: Statutory Management Requirements (SMRs) and Good Agricultural and Environmental Condition (GAEC).
  • 34. Statutory Management Requirements (SMRs) EU legislation on environment, animal and plant health, public health, animal welfare, which farmers should be complying with anyway. Down from 18 to 13 (15 when Water Framework Directive and Sustainable Use of Pesticides Directive have been implemented). Some animal health SMRs removed.
  • 35. Good Agricultural and Environmental Condition (GAEC) 8 requirements (previously 8 compulsory + 6 optional). Retention of permanent pasture removed from GAEC: moved to greening. Minimum stocking density removed from GAEC: moved to agricultural activity definition. New GAEC: “Protection of wetland and carbon rich soils including a ban on first ploughing”
  • 36. Cross-compliance penalties Take account of severity, extent and timescale. As at present: Penalty can be waived if “minor” non-compliance (but not if risk to public or animal health). Negligence: up to 5%, or 15% if repeated. Intentional: 20% to 100%. Detailed rules set by Commission.
  • 37. Next steps: Scotland Consultation on Pillar 1, Dec to Feb. Already consulted widely on Direct Payments for Pack Inquiry, and we need rapid information on stakeholder views. Questionnaire on SG website, with hard copy alternative. Pillar 2, separate approach, including links with Common Strategic Framework. These consultations are to inform the negotiating position. Separate exercises later to decide how to implement.
  • 38. Commission proposal Parliament 1st reading Council 1st reading Parliament 2nd reading Council 2nd reading Conciliation procedure NEXT STEPS: EU By end-2012 or early 2013 ??!
  • 39. Then: EU implementing rules Local implementation decisions. Local implementation.