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EU proposals to curb more green rules for farming subsidies

As part of its plans to reduce regulations and paperwork, the European Commission on Wednesday proposed a further easing of environmental conditions that are tied to EU's massive farming subsidy program.

Last year, farmers in Europe used their political power to protest against issues such as strict EU regulations and cheap imported goods. The EU responded by reducing some of the green conditions that were attached to farm subsidies.

The Commission announced on Wednesday that it would go further in its plans to change the green conditions, other rules, and to limit on-site inspections to just once a year. It said this could save farmers as much as 1.58 billion Euros per annum.

Around 387 billion euro is the value of EU Common Agricultural Policy's (CAP) farming subsidies, which makes up around a third (2021-2027) of the total budget of the EU.

The EU will also double the maximum annual lump sum payment they can receive, from 2,500 Euros to 2,500 Euros.

The EU Agriculture Commissioner Christophe Hansen stated that "the Commission is on the side of farmers and we do our best to reduce bureaucracy, so they can concentrate on what they are best at: producing food for us all while protecting our resources."

The EU encouraged farmers to conserve permanent grasslands to store CO2 and other changes allow farms to remove 10% of them, instead of 5%. Farmers will be able receive more subsidies to meet their existing obligations to protect peatlands and wetland.

This proposal will also allow countries to respond more quickly to natural disasters such as droughts and heatwaves that many European farmers face more often due climate change.

These proposals are part of the "simplification-omnibus" series from the EU, which aims to reduce paperwork and policies for European companies that struggle to compete against China and America, where President Donald Trump has aggressively cut regulations.

The EU would be able, as well, to make more significant changes to its national plans to distribute EU-faming subsidies without having to seek EU approval first.

Now, the EU and its legislators must negotiate and approve these proposals. (Reporting and editing by Ed Osmond, Kate Abnett)

(source: Reuters)