Organic land area dwindles due to low confidence - farmers weekly
Organic land area dwindles due to low confidence - farmers weekly"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
© Tim Scrivener The Soil Association (SA) is concerned a lack of confidence in the organic market is holding farmers back from converting their land. Liz Bowles, head of farming at the SA,
voiced concern over the continuing drop in organic farmland, which she said is a result of a lack of long-term government support for organic production beyond Brexit. She also said it was
clear the strong 7.1% growth seen in the organic market in 2016 is being met through increased yields and production, as Defra’s latest figures revealed a 3.6% drop in the overall organic
land area. See also: Organic market achieves highest sales since 2008 It fell to 507,900ha in 2016 and now makes up just 2.9% of the total farmed area. Scotland reported the greatest
reduction – down 4% to just 122,000ha. Ms Bowles said the number of applications to convert to organic is increasing, but added converting is a “big step for individual farmers”. “We are
calling on the next government to offer stronger support for organic farming by building on the current system and increasing the amount of land farmed using organic methods, which can help
deliver environment, animal welfare and public benefits.” This includes an expansion to the organic conversion and maintenance payments, more organic courses being offered by agricultural
colleges, and ongoing alignment with EU organic regulation. IN CONVERSION There are signs farmers are beginning to regain some confidence as, in 2016, some 25,200ha were “in conversion” – a
22% increase on 2015. The percentage of organic land which is in-conversion has also risen – the first consecutive rise since the peak in organic farming in 2007. These promising signals
were welcomed by Roger Kerr, chief executive of organic farming certifiers OF&G. “The amount of land in conversion shows farmers are recognising the huge potential from the sector to
make a profit,” he said. “And with demand for organic products in the UK and globally predicted to grow again this year, we know UK farmers, growers and processors are attracted to organic
production.”
Trending News
An undergraduate course in prosthetic technologyJournal Published: 21 November 1978 An undergraduate course in prosthetic technology W M Murphy British Dental Journal ...
Govt approved 746 PLI applications till NovThe Union government has approved as many as 746 applications under the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme for 14 ...
Covid will leave australia with smaller economy and older population: frydenbergJosh Frydenberg has painted a sombre picture of the outlook for the Australian economy, saying that by mid next year it ...
Spongebob’s bikini bottom is based on a real-life test site for nuclear weapons“Who lives in a pineapple under the sea?” My anthropology class replied, “SpongeBob SquarePants.” Their thunderous respo...
Arcona uses machine learning to compose adaptive soundtracks in real time | TechCrunchArcona Music took to the stage at Disrupt Berlin today to showcase its adaptive music service. The local startup utilize...
Latests News
Organic land area dwindles due to low confidence - farmers weekly© Tim Scrivener The Soil Association (SA) is concerned a lack of confidence in the organic market is holding farmers bac...
Reliance Infra, Tata Power may face scrutiny by Maharashtra electricity regulatorMaharashtra govt may order scrutiny by power regulator as CAG is yet to respond to audit requestSundar Pichai says this ...
wolf rigs transforms military hummer H1 into overland comfort castle 'patton'Colorado-based company Wolf Rigs has transformed a classic Hummer H1 into the Patton, a ‘go-anywhere overland comfort ca...
Bangalore: property tax to double in it-bt corridorIn an attempt to fill its parlous coffers, the BBMP is contemplating doubling property tax rates in some newly-developed...
A north east oral health programme in residential care homes to implement care quality commission and nice ng48 guidelinesAccess through your institution Buy or subscribe * The North East dental public health led Caring 4 your Smile programme...