The EU has already watered down some environmental policies in
response to the sometimes violent protests, but with farmers
still taking to the streets this week in Belgium and France,
Brussels is under pressure to do more.
Draft conclusions for an EU summit on 21-22 March, seen by
Reuters, showed EU country leaders plan to ask the European
Commission to work without delay on "all possible short-term
measures, including those to reduce the administrative burden
and achieve simplification for farmers".
The EU should also take action to strengthen the position of
farmers in the food supply chain, and ensure they can earn a
fair income, the draft said.
Having already withdrawn a law to reduce pesticides and weakened
some nature protection measures, the EU is looking at new
proposals to ease pressures on European farmers, including a
reduction in farm inspections and the possibility of exempting
small farms from some environmental standards.
The crisis in the sector comes as Europe faces increasingly dire
warnings from scientists about the environmental damage
industrial farming is causing, and the urgent need to protect
nature in the face of worsening climate change.
The EU Environment Agency this week said current EU food
policies are failing to address climate change risks.
It suggested Europe consider policies to encourage less
livestock farming, since shifting to plant-based proteins could
help farmers reduce their reliance on imported animal feed and
use less water, which climate change is making an increasingly
scarce resource in drought-stricken southern Europe.
Angry farmers have staged protests from Poland, to Germany, to
France and Slovenia in recent months to draw attention to
numerous complaints, including cheap supermarket prices,
low-cost imports from outside of Europe, and EU green policies
some say are excessive.
(Reporting by Kate Abnett; Editing by Jan Harvey)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2022 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.

|
|