Awdur (Person) | Bower, Helen | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Manylion y Gyfres | 28.1.03 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dyddiad Cyhoeddi | 28/01/2003 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Despite tough opposition in some Member States, notably France and Ireland, the European Commission remains committed to reforming the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) - one of the EU's most notorious and costly policies - and, as such, a new package of proposals [COM(2003)23] were adopted on 22 January 2003. The main objective of the reforms is to provide European farmers with a long-term model of sustainable agriculture that will make the industry more competitive and market orientated whilst offering greater protection to the environment. Presenting the proposals to the Committee for Agriculture (COMAGRI) in the European Parliament, Franz Fischler, the European Commissioner for Agriculture, Rural Development and Fisheries said: 'This reform has one objective: Making sense of farm subsidies for our farmers, consumers and taxpayers. We need reforms and we need to decide now. Our plans will give farmers a clear perspective to plan ahead'. IP/03/99 Whilst the European Commission is likely to receive backing from the UK and German governments who are keen to push ahead with reforms, France, Ireland and Spain are likely to put up stiff opposition to any changes. There are also mixed views amongst stakeholders and the European Commission will face a tough battle if it is to succeed in the adoption of new reforms. Background Despite reforms to the Common Agricultural Policy in 1992 and 1999, new pressures to reform the CAP have manifested themselves since: the BSE crisis, foot and mouth disease, the policy's effect on the annual budget and on third world economies are, when taken individually, widely regarded as valid reasons for undertaking a further reform of the CAP, together they represent an irrefutable case. In July 2002, the European Commission presented a series of proposals for future European agricultural policy as part of the CAP's Mid-term review [COM(2002)394], which the Berlin European Council had agreed should be carried out in 2002 to evaluate the success of the 1999 reforms. The main elements of the proposals were:
These are explained in more detail in European Sources Online's previous In Focus: However, the plans met with tough opposition from some Member States, particularly France and Ireland. Indeed, at the Brussels European Council in October 2002 French President, Jacques Chirac, 'struck a deal' with German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder whereby the two countries agreed that CAP would not be reformed until after 2006, when the financial perspectives, agreed at Berlin in 1999 run out. The leaders also agreed that there would be a ceiling on farm spending until 2013. The deal angered other Member States, particularly the United Kingdom who have been pushing for a thorough reform. Members from the European Commission also expressed their dismay at the compromise. European Commission tries again As a result of the agreement in Brussels to freeze the current CAP budget until 2006, the European Commission was forced to adjust its original proposals. The new package of proposed reforms are based on the financial framework for agriculture expenditure that has been agreed up until 2013. The main elements of the proposals are:
In comparison to the proposals outlined in July 2002 in the mid term review of the CAP, the latest reforms are still based on the initial ideas but a number of key changes have been introduced:
In a press release detailing the new proposals the European Commission said: 'The proposal will make European agriculture more competitive and market orientated, promote a substantial simplification in the CAP, facilitate the enlargement process and help to better defend the CAP in the WTO. The proposed adjustments allow maximum flexibility in production decisions of farmers while guaranteeing them income stability. The implementation of the Commission reform would remove environmentally negative incentives in the current policy and provide further encouragement for more sustainable farming practices. These adjustments are necessary to ensure that the EU is able to provide a sustainable and predictable policy framework for the European model of agriculture over the coming years'. To trace the full progress of the latest proposals through the policy-making process you can use these services.
Reaction to the proposals Yet despite having made adjustments to the July 2002 proposals, the European Commission is still expected to face tough opposition from those Member States that have large agricultural sectors. The French Agriculture Minister, Hervé Gaymard, has said that France will oppose the Commission's plans and Spain, Portugal and Ireland are all expected to support France in opposing any reforms. The European farm lobbying organisation COPA-COGECA has also expressed its opposition to carrying out reforms before 2006. In a press release issued on 22 January 2003 entitled 'Wrong Way and Bad Timing', the Presidents of the organisation, Mr. Sonnleitner and Mr. Borgstrom said, 'Everybody in Europe would be worse off under the Commission's mid-term proposals'. The press statement added: 'A clear decision was made at the Berlin Summit of 1999 that Agenda 2000 would be implemented until 2006. There is no reason to change this timetable. The Commission has not taken the instructions given by the Council or the Parliament seriously. It has not taken account of the proposals made by the farming sector. It also ignores the fact that the experiment of an MTR-like reform failed completely in the US. We call upon the Council and the Parliament to change the content and the timing of the reform in such a way that the EU will first negotiate in the WTO on the basis of the present mandate, thus allowing the accession countries to be fully involved in decision making. The proposals have also been criticised by environmental organisations, although their argument is that the latest reforms are 'too weak'. The European Policy Office of the World Wildlife Fund issued a statement saying: 'WWF believes the European Commission's new proposals for the mid-term review of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), due to be presented on Wednesday, show an astonishing back-tracking from the daring package Commissioner Fischler presented last July - which offered significant potential for an environmentally sustainable development of rural areas - making the future look very bleak'. Birdlife International voiced similar criticisms: Sue Armstrong Brown, the organisation's senior Agriculture Officer, BirdLife International said, 'This deal is bad for everyone, farmers and environmentalists alike. Without real commitment to rural development, we will continue to see massive declines in farmland wildlife. Its only redeeming feature, and this is also under threat, is the decoupling of farm support from productivity. If the European Commission does not stick to its original vision for a simpler, less bureaucratic CAP, the loss for farmers and consumers as well as for biodiversity and wildlife will be tremendous'. Reforms before 2006? Amidst such negative criticism, the European Commission will have a tough time getting through any reforms that meet the objectives of all stakeholders and the European Parliament's agriculture committee has already expressed its disappointment that the most innovative aspects of the July 2002 reforms have been 'watered down'. Support can be expected from Germany and the United Kingdom, although with the Franco-German relationship strengthening it remains to be seen whether Germany will yet again change its position on CAP reforms. However the UK government remain staunchly committed to pushing ahead with the reforms and the UK National Farmers Union welcomed the proposals, saying: 'Many of the proposed reforms to the Common Agricultural Policy announced today are on the right lines. If introduced in the right way, the proposals will help the EU to meet its international obligations while improving farm profitability'. But the European Commission will need to persuade many more sectors of that line of thinking before the Common Agricultural policy is reformed once again. Agriculture ministers will discuss the latest proposal for the first time on 27 January 2003. The Greek Presidency had hoped to push the reform through by June before the Italians take over the Presidency and ahead of the September meeting of the World Trade Organisation in Cancun, Mexico but whether that can be achieved remains seriously in doubt. Further information within European Sources Online:
Further information can be seen in these external links: EU Institutions
Helen Bower Compiled: Tuesday, 28 January 2003 The European Commission adopted a new package of proposals on 22 January 2003 aimed at reforming the EU's notorious Common Agricultural Policy. |
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