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EU accepts relaxation of green rules for farming subsidy reform

EU member states have reached an agreement with the European Parliament on a temporary overhaul of EU farming subsidies. The environmental standards will be weakened as part of plans for reducing regulations and paperwork.

The EU will increase payments to smaller farmers, but they are exempted from the baseline requirements that tie their subsidies to environmental protection.

In a late-night statement, Denmark's Minister of European Affairs Marie Bjerre stated that the move would help boost the competitiveness of the agricultural sector across Europe.

Campaigners claim that the changes will make farmers more susceptible to climate change. In May, the EU Commission announced proposals to overhaul its policies after months of protests from farmers against issues such as strict EU regulations and low-cost imports. The EU Commission responded by reducing some of the green conditions that were attached to farm subsidies. It went even further with its new plans for Common Agricultural Policy.

The Commission estimates that the revamp could save farmers as much as 1.6 billion Euros ($1.87 billion per year), while on-site inspections on farms would only be allowed once a year.

Around 387 billion euro is the value of CAP, which represents around a third in total budget for 2021-2027. These plans are part of the "simplification-omnibus" EU proposals that aim to reduce paperwork and policies for businesses trying to compete against China and America, where President Donald Trump has aggressively cut regulations.

Now the EU Council and European Parliament must formally adopt the provisional agreement.

(source: Reuters)