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EU allows member states to increase farmer payments after protests

European Union member states can increase the funds they pay to farmers, the European Commission said on Friday, after protests by farmers previously in the year forced policymakers to scale back climate guidelines.

The Commission said it would allow EU member mentions to pay higher advances of Typical Farming Policy funds to farmers, which would enable them to get approximately 70% of direct payments beforehand beginning in October, and as much as 85% beforehand payments for location and animal-based interventions under rural advancement.

Such payments are presently 50% and 75%, respectively.

EU farmers continue to deal with liquidity problems, significantly due to severe weather condition events which have had an impact on yields in recent years, in addition to high rates of interest on European monetary markets and high costs of agricultural inputs and commodities, the commission stated in a declaration.

The Commission has taken comparable measures before, significantly in 2020 in action to the coronavirus pandemic.

Previously this year, farmers blockaded roads to demand action on low earnings, cheap food imports, challenging regulations and unreasonable competitors from abroad.

Key portions of EU policy have actually been impacted as Brussels looks for to lighten farmers.

The EU withdrew a law to reduce making use of pesticides, postponed a target for farmers to leave some land fallow to increase biodiversity and discarded an objective to minimize farming emissions from its 2040 climate roadmap.

(source: Reuters)