Brussels’ mission impossible: Greening
agriculture
New rules aimed at restoring nature have unleashed a
major fight that endangers the EU’s climate agenda.
BY LOUISE
GUILLOT, ANTONIA ZIMMERMANN AND SUSANNAH SAVAGE
JUNE 13,
2023 6:45 PM CET
Brussels is
coming for the bloc’s last largely unregulated polluter — farms — and that's unleashed
a toxic mud fight.
The
European Commission’s ambition to green the bloc’s agricultural model will be
put to a decisive test Thursday when the European Parliament's environment
committee holds a vote that could kill off a major plank of the EU’s Green
Deal.
The
conservative European People's Party is going all-in to sink the bill that's
meant to restore 20 percent of degraded land to a good natural state by 2030;
the group claims that threatens farmers’ livelihoods by potentially taking
their land away and undermining food security.
The
campaign could derail Commission President Ursula von der Leyen's Green Deal
project — the bloc's grand plan for climate neutrality by mid-century. After
fighting off resistance to measures aimed at cutting emissions from energy,
transport and industry, the EU wants to do the same to farms — but that's
proving to be even more explosive.
EPP leader
Manfred Weber says his group will reject the nature restoration proposal on
Thursday, not because it's opposed to a green transition for the farming sector
but because “bringing about a change of this magnitude cannot be improvised.”
“Professionals
need concrete, clear rules, a precise timetable and a list of foreseeable
consequences ... the exact opposite of the catalog of far-fetched and abstract
measures proposed by the European Commission,” Weber argued.
The EPP has
also teamed up with farmers’ organizations to open fire on other green
legislation targeting farmers, including new rules to halve pesticide use and
plans to slash emissions from big farms.
Opponents
accuse the Bavarian politician of going too far to achieve his group's aims.
Environment Committee chair Pascal Canfin, with the liberal Renew Europe group,
said Weber was "blackmailing" his own MEPs with the threat of
expulsion if they don't follow his push to reject the Nature Restoration
Regulation on Thursday.
The vote is
likely to be extremely tight, with the result hinging on a handful of
nonaligned, liberal and conservative lawmakers. Failure in the environment
committee increases the likelihood it will be killed off at a plenary vote
scheduled for July — blowing a hole in the EU's climate agenda.
Angry farmers
Farmers say
they’re already doing a lot to become more sustainable and they want the
Commission to wait for the results before throwing new regulations at them.
“We are
willing to do our part” in the fight against climate change and biodiversity
loss, said Pekka Pesonen, the head of the EU farmers’ lobby Copa & Cogeca.
He said the Commission’s proposal is “not realistic, nor is it practical,” and
that's leading to “huge frustration for the farm community.”
Critics
counter that the lobby is entrenching an outmoded farming model that simply
won't be viable in the long term.
“Farmers
are led to believe that if they don't have a certain synthetic chemical, they
will not be able to make a living,” said Eric Gall, deputy director of IFOAM
Organics Europe, a business association promoting organic farming.
The bloc
pumps a third of its annual budget into the sector through its Common
Agricultural Policy — but has so far failed to slash agriculture's carbon
footprint. In 2020, agriculture made up 11 percent of the bloc’s greenhouse gas
emissions, a figure that's been relatively constant since 2005.
Researchers
and campaigners argue that political reluctance to implement tough regulation
is partly to blame for that lack of progress.
There’s a
history of “agricultural exceptionalism,” said Elisabet Nadeu, a senior policy
analyst at the Institute for European Environmental Policy.
The CAP was
born of the need to safeguard European food security — and while it is now
slowly switching gear to greener practices, its structure hinders large-scale
transformation.
Agriculture
is “primarily targeted through subsidies,” said Jonathan Verschuuren, a
professor of international and European environmental law at the University of
Tilburg. “If you want to have a big shift toward a more sustainable business,
then what works best is very strict targets."
The bloc’s
approach to agriculture also reflects the power of entrenched farming interests
in Brussels and EU capitals.
The
“biggest and strongest lobbies” are defending a food and farming system that is
harmful human health, the environment, and small farmers “who are disappearing
at — to say the least — alarming rates,” said Marco Contiero, Greenpeace EU’s
agriculture policy director, pointing to the steep decline in the number of
farms in the EU.
Intensive
agriculture is associated with high methane and nitrous oxide emissions, and
identified as a key driver of pollution and biodiversity loss.
Slashing
that impact is all the more urgent as climate change and biodiversity decline
pose the greatest threats to agriculture and farmers’ livelihoods in the long
term, scientists say.
“There will
be a massive food security issue in 2050 if we keep on producing the way we are
producing right now, so this transition is extremely important exactly for food
security reasons,” said Verschuuren.
Tough sell
That’s a
message Brussels has trouble getting across.
Despite
preparing the ground with a host of strategies and action plans on food, forest
management and biodiversity, the Commission has been struggling to find a
majority in favor of its latest green push in the Parliament and among EU
member countries.
The impact
of Russia’s attack on Ukraine is making it an even tougher sell to farmers hit
by disrupted supply chains and higher costs. National governments have also
pushed back on green rules targeting farming, undermining the message that for
agriculture to survive in the long term it must go green.
Paolo di
Stefano, Brussels director of the Italian farm lobby Coldiretti, said the group
initially backed the Commission's idea but now isn't happy that Brussels is
pressing ahead “without taking into account that the world has changed.”
The EU
executive can't even count on its own agriculture commissioner to defend the
Green Deal: Janusz Wojciechowski sided with the EPP when he shared a tweet that
criticized the Commission's stance on agriculture and said "we can only
achieve our climate goals with farmers, not against them!"
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