EPP pitches itself as farmers’ party ahead of
2024 European election
Europe’s conservatives have thrown a wrench in Brussels’
Green Deal plans.
BY LOUISE
GUILLOT AND BARTOSZ BRZEZIŃSKI
MAY 4, 2023
3:37 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/european-peoples-party-farmer-rural-interest-2024-european-election/
The
center-right European People's Party is pitching itself as the defender of
farmers and rural interests ahead of next year's European election, doubling
down on its disapproval of EU green policies.
The
conservative group, the largest in the European Parliament, has been
campaigning against two key Green Deal proposals: new rules on pesticides and
nature restoration that they say threaten the EU's long-term food security.
The
Sustainable Use of Pesticides Regulation aims to slash chemical pesticides use
and risk by half by 2030, while the Nature Restoration Regulation calls for the
EU to restore at least 20 percent of the bloc’s degraded areas by the end of
the decade and all sites in need of restoration by 2050. The Commission's
objective is for both proposals to become law before the 2024 European
election.
The EPP
argues that these goals are too steep and will put an unfair burden on farmers
at a time when they've been asked to boost food production amid Russia's
unlawful war on Ukraine, previously a major agricultural exporter to the bloc.
The party
on Friday is expected to adopt a resolution, obtained by POLITICO, that again
"rejects" the Commission's proposals and calls for them to be
scrapped altogether. That sets it up for a fight with Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen, who is also an EPP member and has staked her legacy on making
Europe go climate neutral.
Populism
The
conservative party has been fighting the Commission president's green ambitions
since late last year, including by publishing misleading statements on social
media warning of higher food prices and “even a global famine.”
It also
claimed the nature restoration proposal will lead to countries having to “tear
down villages built 100 years ago” to restore wetlands. When asked for examples
of where this might happen, a press officer for the EPP group said they could
“not refer to any particular villages, nominally.”
In
negotiations on the proposals, the EPP is pushing to scale back the scope and
ambition of the new laws. It argues that nature restoration measures should
only be mandatory within protected Natura 2000 areas, in order not to impede on
agricultural land.
The EPP has
also found allies in the Parliament’s Euroskeptic European Conservatives and
Reformists, and the far-right Identity & Democracy. In April, all three
groups proposed several amendments calling for the pesticide reduction law and
the nature restoration legislation to be struck down.
NGOs have
voiced their displeasure at the EPP's tactics, accusing members of
"scaremongering" and acting in "extreme bath faith."
“There is a
mountain of scientific evidence showing that the threat to our ability to
produce food in Europe, and globally, is overwhelmingly coming from climate
change and the collapse of biodiversity,” said Ariel Brunner, regional director
of the NGO BirdLife Europe.
The EPP is
trying to "weaken" the legislation to ensure it "almost becomes
meaningless," said Sabien Leemans, senior biodiversity policy officer at
WWF Europe, suggesting that the party is turning to "populist
rhetoric" as part of its "pre-election campaign mode."
The EU’s
Green Deal chief Frans Timmermans on Thursday also came out against the EPP's
rhetoric, arguing that farmers' food production will be "directly
threatened" by biodiversity loss and that his goal is to be an ally to
farmers.
Farmers are
being told that they are "heroes" and that "the "Green Deal
is standing in their way," he said. "But how will they remain heroes
when the soil is dead and that there are crop failures due to drought?”
The EPP
isn’t the only party putting up roadblocks to the contentious Green Deal targets.
The liberal
Renew Europe group is split over the nature restoration legislation too, with
roughly half of its members arguing that the targets should be scaled back
while the other half wants them increased. The liberals, as well as the
Socialists & Democrats, are also grappling with internal divisions on
whether the draft pesticides law is too ambitious or not ambitious enough.
This
article has been updated.

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