7 fights to watch in Europe’s farm reforms
Battles are expected over green targets and limits on
cash for big farms.
BY EDDY WAX
AND GABRIELA GALINDO
May 24,
2021 7:53 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/7-fights-to-follow-as-the-eu-reforms-its-farm-policy/
The EU's Common Agricultural Policy is like a giant
cash-filled piñata.
The candies
it contains are €270 billion of EU farm subsidies, and like kids on a sugar
high at a birthday party, negotiators will spend the next few days in
closed-door talks in Brussels, each trying to whack it as hard as they can.
The CAP is
the biggest single slice of the regular EU budget and everyone wants their cut.
Satisfying all those contending demands will be hard, given how much still
divides the three teams of negotiators: the European Commission, the European
Parliament and the 27 national governments represented by the EU Council.
With the
flagship European Green Deal looming, negotiators are under pressure to make
the new EU farm policy greener, but also to address longstanding concerns about
corruption and the unequal distribution of funds between large and small
farmers.
The
political context couldn't be more fraught, with Portugal (negotiating on
behalf of all EU governments) rushing to broker a deal so it does not have to
suffer the embarrassment of handing over a not-quite-finished reform to
Slovenia at the end of June.
The whole
CAP has already been delayed by two years and politicians now want to score a
deal on the 2023-to-2027 payments so they can tell farmers they've secured them
some peace of mind. But so many controversial issues are on the agenda that a
deal this week is by no means guaranteed.
Here are
the key fights that will be the focus of horse-trading, and could even torpedo
the talks entirely.
1. Greener
farming
Attempts to
offer sweeteners to Europe’s badly paid, aging farmers so they adopt greener
practices will take center stage.
Legislators
are scrapping over how much money to earmark for the new CAP’s flagship green
element: the eco-schemes. These voluntary programs encourage farmers to take up
more nature-friendly practices. Parliament has pushed for 30 percent of all
direct payments to be reserved for eco-schemes, while the Council wants only 20
percent. In terms of hard cash, that's a difference of around €20 billion over
the five years. But now the even harder fight is over the Council’s demand for
a less-ambitious initial two-year learning period.
The other
major green battle is over what basic land management conditions farmers should
meet to get any cash from Brussels, and here it’s a story of exemptions,
loopholes and derogations galore for small farmers which infuriate
environmentalists but which legislators say are needed to help grow farm
businesses.
Maize
monoculture giant France is leading the charge to water down a crop rotation
rule, while both the Parliament and the Council want to limit the requirement
to leave space for nature on farms to only arable land.
Who will
win? Some countries may push for a 25 percent compromise on the eco-schemes but
will want flexibilities to count other kinds of green programs toward that goal
in return. MEPs could accept a smaller overall eco-schemes budget but only if
countries throw them a bone on the learning period. Nature looks unlikely to
emerge victorious.
2. Labor
protections for farm workers
Parliament
wants the new CAP to dock EU subsidies from wealthy farm bosses who exploit
workers and breach the bloc’s employment protections. Its push for “social
conditionality” attempts to improve the working conditions of an estimated 4
million people doing dangerous underpaid work in Europe’s agriculture sector,
from seasonal migrant workers in southern EU countries to German abattoir staff
exposed to coronavirus hotspots.
But the
sides are acres apart. The Council says for now it’s better to boost legal
advice to farmers and reassess in 2026. Parliament rejects that and is sticking
to its guns on a fully-blown sanction system. If the CAP already includes
environmental conditions, then why not social ones, MEPs ask. Powerful farm
lobbies and 13 governments, including Austria, Greece and Belgium are dead set
against the Parliament’s demand, saying it will burden farmers with red tape
and is unreasonable for the CAP to eat into countries’ social policy.
Who will
win? The Parliament’s second largest group, the Socialists and Democrats, has
set stronger labor protections as its price for backing any overall deal, and
some of its MEPs already rebelled to vote against the CAP last year.
Governments will have to give Parliament something, though it’s unlikely to be
what trade unions want.
3. Fairer
payments
Some €270
billion will be doled out from Brussels over the course of the five-year CAP. A
huge fight will center on whether most of those payments will keep going to
those who need them least, such as huge landowners, fake farmers, or corrupt
politicians, or could instead be diverted to small and medium sized farms.
But how to
do that? Facing opposition from the Council, the Parliament and Commission have
pretty much given up hope of imposing a mandatory €100,000 per year maximum
ceiling on payments to big farms, and are instead focusing their efforts on
beefing up a requirement to redistribute a certain proportion of money to
smaller farmers. MEPs want this to be 12 percent of farm funds received per
country, but the Council’s offer is 7.5 percent. Even if this doesn’t come out
of the paychecks of big farms, it could still make the CAP a bit fairer. But
Parliament thinks countries just want a blank check. All this is rumbling in
the context of broader imbalances anyway: a Latvian farm gets less EU money per
hectare than a German one, for instance.
Who will
win? France recently set out its stall, saying it intends to keep
redistributing 10 percent of direct subsidies. But although that seems an
obvious compromise, Paris is one of the few countries that already does this.
With so many competing interests, let alone the complexity of the math, a deal
here will be like a fiendishly tricky sudoku puzzle for Portugal to solve.
4.
Fair-trade play
The
question of how far to shift the EU’s trade rules to protect EU farmers from
lopsided import competition remains one of the thorniest debates.
MEPs are
eager to protect farmers from a flood of cheaper imports produced under laxer
rules at a time when they are being asked to shift into more sustainable modes
of production. Think about parts of the world with child labor, deforestation
and unregulated chemicals. Some governments, however, are wary about putting
restrictions on such imports through fear of breaking World Trade Organization
(WTO) rules.
Council has
notched up a partial victory here already, offering to issue a joint political
declaration instead of so-called trade safeguard amendments from MEPs. Still,
some parliamentarians are still refusing to drop a push to keep agricultural
and agri-food imports grown using EU-banned pesticides from entering the bloc,
and are calling for any non-compliant imports to be banned by 2025 at the
latest.
Who will
win? Some EU countries are lukewarm about making any far-reaching commitments
on trade and are instead asking the Commission for one of its signature impact
assessments. But MEPs may have a backup wildcard, as Brussels has signaled
support for a revamp of WTO agri-food rules to secure its Green Deal goals.
Alternatively, lawmakers could be OK with waiting for Paris — a staunch
proponent of this trade revamp push — to take over the reins of the EU Council
next year.
5.
Brussels’ powers
Another big
fight is over how strongly the Commission should be able to vet national CAP
plans from the member countries, if they plan to splash money on projects or
even eco-schemes that don’t align with the EU’s hallowed Green Deal.
Officials
from the European Commission's agriculture department avoid using the word
“reject” in relation to the plans for fear of enraging national capitals, but
Parliament is pushing for two mid-term reviews that would ensure the next
generation of national plans can incorporate the oncoming tide of climate and
environment legislation from Brussels. People following the file say Green Deal
Chief Frans Timmermans is clashing with Agriculture Commissioner Janusz
Wojciechowski on this, and pushing for Brussels to sharpen its teeth.
Who will
win? Countries refuse to be tied down by Green Deal plans that aren’t even law
yet. And given that handing more agricultural autonomy to the member countries
was the raison d’être of Brussels’ original proposal, the prospects don’t look
super bright for Parliament’s desires.
6. Rooting
out corruption
In whose
pockets do all these farm subsidies actually end up? Often no one really knows,
and that’s why the Parliament is pushing to make it a legal requirement for all
recipients to disclose which legal entity their farm belongs to. MEPs have
leaders like Hungary's Viktor Orbán and the Czech Republic's Andrej Babiš in
their crosshairs here. But the Council doesn’t want to be bound to using the
high-tech data tool that MEPs think can do the job — and the Commission says
it’s not ready yet.
In a
separate fight, some lawmakers also want to shed more light on who ends up
benefiting from Brussels’ regulatory maneuvers by identifying the buyers of
public intervention food stocks or, at the very least, their destination
market.
Who will
win? Council could agree to use the ARACHNE data-mining tool but only if it
remains voluntary, while an internal division among MEPs about the need for
more regulatory transparency could play in the Council’s favor.
7. Sugar
shields
Council
negotiators succeeded in scratching poultry, sheep, and pigmeat from a
protectionist wishlist from MEPs, but lawmakers are refusing to back down on
sugar, saying the sector is reeling from the end of production quotas in 2017
and needs to be shielded from what they see as a looming shake-up in pursuit of
a greener and more sustainable market.
To do so,
they want to see sugar tacked on to the list of goods including cereals, beef
and some dairy products that are protected by public intervention schemes,
through which Brussels buys out and stores goods hit by market crises or
disturbances to resell later.
In a sign
of how things are playing out so far on the ground, sugar farmers are firmly
backing MEPs’ calls for more protection while the sugar processing industry is
pushing back against any change of the current status quo.
Who will
win? EU countries and the Commission are both keen on keeping Brussels’ safety
net from being stretched too wide. The publication of a Commission report on
how the end of the sugar quota has impacted the sector, expected in the fall,
could well favor this wait-and-see approach.
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