Europe's restless farmers are forcing policymakers to act
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[April 03, 2024]
By Kate Abnett
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European policymakers have scaled back rules to
protect nature, drawn up limits on the import of tariff-free Ukrainian
grains and scrapped new legislation limiting pesticide use as farmers'
protests resonate with voters ahead of elections.
From Poland to Portugal, farmers have won remarkable concessions in
response to waves of street action, reshaping the European Union's green
politics months ahead of European Parliament elections.
Environmental activists and analysts say the policy backsliding
illustrates the considerable political influence of farmers as
mainstream parties seek to impede the far right and nationalist parties'
hunt for votes in rural areas.
Farmers again blockaded streets surrounding the European Union
headquarters in Brussels last week, spraying manure to protest low
incomes, cheap food imports and burdensome red tape. As they did so, the
bloc's farming ministers backed a new set of changes to weaken green
rules linked to the disbursement of tens of billions of euros in farming
subsidies.
When the last European elections were held in 2019, the Greens made
strong gains and climate activist Greta Thunberg was voted Time
Magazine's Person of the Year.
"The elections in 2024 will be elections in the year of angry farmers,"
said Franc Bogovic, a Slovenian lawmaker in the European Parliament and
himself a farmer.
The scramble to placate farmers has impacted key pillars of EU policy,
pressuring the bloc over its Green Deal and free trade accords.
EU environment commissioner Virginijus Sinkevicius warned of a
"disastrous" blow to the bloc's credibility last week, when EU countries
declined to approve a landmark law to safeguard nature, leaving it
unclear if the policy will be passed.
Other green measures are hanging in the balance ahead of the election.
EU countries asked Brussels last week to scale back and possibly delay a
new anti-deforestation policy, which they said could harm local farmers.
In France, senators in March voted against ratification of an EU-Canada
free trade deal, targeting a symbol of the EU's willingness to open up
markets and boost competition.
And while the EU has extended tariff-free access for Ukrainian food
producers, it agreed last month to impose duties if imports exceed a
certain level, in response to farmers' protests.
Some farming groups acknowledge the response by policymakers to the
protests is likely linked to June's elections - but say the weakening of
green rules is not what they want.
"Our demands (for fair prices) have not actually been met," said Dutch
farmer Leonardo van den Berg, a representative of farming association La
Via Campesina.
RURAL DISCONTENT
Farmers account for 4.2% of the EU's workforce and generate just 1.4% of
the bloc's gross domestic product. However, their protests resonate in
the countryside where discontent towards distant policymakers and
questions of cultural identity run deep.
A report commissioned by the EU's Committee of the Regions, published
last month, found Eurosceptic voting was high in many rural areas, where
concerns including over migration and lower economic opportunities
boosted populist parties.
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Tractors stand on a street during a protest by Belgian farmers
over price pressures, taxes and green regulation, on the day of an
EU agriculture ministers' meeting in Brussels, Belgium March 26,
2024. REUTERS/Yves Herman/File Photo
An Elabe survey in January showed 87% of French people supported the
farmers' cause. In Poland, nearly eight in every 10 people backed
the farmers' demands, according to a poll by the Institute of Market
and Social Research.
The far right in France and elsewhere paint the farmers' protests as
symptomatic of a disconnect between an urban elite and hard-up
countryside folk. Farmers are a small group, but the far right
thinks it can attract a much wider rural vote by extension, said
Teneo analyst Antonio Barroso.
Far-right parties are jostling to be the standard-bearers of
farmers’ discontent, using them to illustrate the perceived failure
of what they consider elitist green policies, said Simone
Tagliapietra, senior fellow at think-tank Bruegel.
"This is pushing mainstream political parties to recalibrate their
own agendas," Tagliapietra said.
In France, farmers are a growing constituency for Marine Le Pen's
far-right National Rally (Rassemblement National) party. She has
called for a halt to EU free trade deals.
Asked why farmers were proving so effective in influencing
policymaking, agriculture ministers in Brussels last week described
farmers as lynchpins of the rural economy.
"Everybody needs to eat everyday," Finland's minister Sari Essayah
said. "(Farming) is one of those basic sectors we should support."
Irish Agriculture Minister Charlie McConalogue said Europe needed to
learn from the upheaval to food supply chains inflicted by Russia's
war in Ukraine.
"We cannot take food security for granted," he said.
Environmental campaigners warn of the pace at which environmental
policies are being loosened for what they say is political
expediency.
Changes to weaken environmental criteria linked to the disbursement
of subsidies under the EU's Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) had
taken place at lightning speed without proper consultation,
Greenpeace said.
"What they are now presenting as a set of simplification adjustments
is literally a CAP reform worked out in a week," said Marco Contiero,
the group's EU agriculture policy director, somewhat exaggerating
what were still speedy proposals.
"This is a political, an electoral card being played," he said.
A Commission spokesperson said the proposals to amend the CAP were
"carefully calibrated, and targeted to maintain a high level of
environment and climate ambition".
The Commission consulted four EU-level farming associations and EU
member states before proposing the measures to reduce bureaucracy
for farmers, the spokesperson said.
(Reporting by Kate Abnett in Brussels; additional reporting by
Philip Blenkinsop in Brussels, Sybille de la Hamaide in Paris;
Editing by Richard Lough and Susan Fenton)
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