Greta Thunberg accuses MEPs of 'surrender on
climate and environment'
European parliament votes to continue payments to
farmers with no green conditions attached
Daniel
Boffey in Brussels
Wed 21 Oct
2020 15.19 BSTLast modified on Wed 21 Oct 2020 16.58 BST
Greta
Thunberg, the Swedish school strike pioneer and environmental activist, has
accused MEPs of surrendering on the climate and environment by voting in favour
of a watered-down reform of the EU’s common agricultural policy.
The
European parliament voted late on Wednesday in favour of proposals put forward
by the main political groups that will continue 60% of the current direct
payments to farmers with weak or non-existent green conditions attached.
The changes
backed by the parliament weaken an already heavily criticised proposal from the
European commission on reform of the CAP, which accounts for one-third of the
EU budget.
MEPs will
continue to vote on a host of issues around future reforms up until Friday, as
parliament sets its position before negotiations with the member states and the
European commission.
One of the
most high-profile issues at stake is whether the European parliament will back
reducing the use of terms such as burger, steak, sausage and escalope for
non-meat products, as demanded by Europe’s meat and livestock industry and
supported by the parliament’s agricultural committee.
Thunberg
claimed that the attention given to that issue had allowed MEPs to get away
with supporting a policy she has long argued has been a driving force behind
the intensification of agriculture, fuelling greenhouse gas emissions and
pollution, and leading to a decline in farmland birds and pollinators.
Thunberg
tweeted: “While media was reporting on ‘names of vegan hot dogs’ the EU
parliament signed away €387bn [£350bn] to a new agricultural policy that
basically means surrender on climate & environment. No awareness means no
pressure and accountability so the outcome is no surprise. They just don’t
care.”
The vote
had passed in the parliament with the support of the centre-right European
People’s party, the Socialists & Democrats and Renew Europe, made up of
MEPs from various groups including those in Emmanuel Macron’s La République En
Marche and the former Alliance of Liberals and Democrats. An amendment to
reject the commission’s initial proposal outright, put forward by the Green
party, was heavily defeated.
Bas
Eickhout, a Green MEP, said: “Climate change and ecological breakdown pose a
severe threat to farming, our food system and our future on this planet and yet
a large number of MEPs are wilfully ignoring the enormous scale of the problem.
“Unfortunately,
the EPP, Socialists and Renew groups have watered down the already weak
proposals of the commission by continuing with 60% of direct payments with very
weak conditions.
“Without
binding targets for more climate protection, less pesticides in the fields and
less antibiotics in livestock farming, the CAP will stand as the very
antithesis to the purpose of the Green Deal,” Eickhout said.
He
concluded: “Shorter supply chains, adequate payments and secure jobs can make
European agricultural policy a model for healthy, locally produced and sold
food. This CAP reform will mean that EU countries are even prevented from
spending more on ambitious measures to protect the climate and the environment,
and improve animal welfare.”
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