New study on "Public Goods provided by Agriculture in the European Union"

Published: 25 January 2010 y., Monday

Žemdirbystė
The Common Agricultural Policy plays a critical role in helping farmers to deliver environmental goods and services, provided that policies are targeted in the right way. This is the key message of a report published today for DG Agriculture and Rural Development by the Institute for European Environmental Policy. The report is a first ever attempt to identify the full range of environmental public goods provided by farmers across Europe and sets out the arguments for paying for their delivery via the public purse. The study identifies a wide range of diverse environmental and social public goods that are provided by European farmers, including valued cultural landscapes 1 ; farmland birds, such as the globally threatened Great Bustard and Imperial Eagle 2 ; and the species-rich meadows that are found across Europe. In addition, farmers manage the land for carbon storage and help to maintain high quality water and soils. The results of this study come at a time when the debate about the future of the CAP is intensifying and when the objectives and priorities of the CAP for the period after 2013 are being discussed. The study concludes that a well targeted policy, with clear objectives and sufficient budgetary resources, will be essential to ensure the delivery of public goods in line with society's expectations.

The study demonstrates that the European public places a high value on these public goods and yet the evidence suggests that they are not being provided on a sufficient scale. It finds that the CAP has a range of measures that help to support farmers in the delivery of public goods. The combination of direct payments and cross compliance supports a basic level of public goods provision across a large proportion of the EU farmed area. Rural Development measures, such as the agri-environment measure, provide the incentives for farmers to deliver a wide range of public goods in a more targeted manner.

The report concludes that many of these public goods are undersupplied. The undersupply of public goods is likely to be accentuated in the future in the face of threats such as trends in commodity prices, technological drivers and the impacts of climate change, suggesting the need for a greater degree of public intervention in the future.

1 :

Including, for example, the unique landscapes of the English hills and moors, the pastoral landscapes in southern Transylvania, Romania, the terraced landscapes characterised by traditional olive production and other permanent crops in Italy and Spain, the high alpine pastures of Austria, southern France and northern Italy, the grazing marshes of Mecklenburg in Germany, and the extensive rice fields of the Ebro Delta, north east Spain.

2 :

Great Bustard ( Otis tarda) and Imperial Eagle ( Aquila heliaca).

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Statoil Extends Contract for Safe Scandinavia

Statoil and Prosafe have entered into an agreement for another 14 days work for the service- and accommodation rig Safe Scandinavia at the Sleipner field in the North Sea more »

Sberbank loses market share

Sberbank's share of the market for individual deposits decreased to 62.4 percent as of August 1, 2004 from the beginning of this year more »

South Korea Sends Business Delegation to Eastern Europe

South Korea's Foreign Ministry said Saturday that it has sent a business delegation to three Eastern European countries to hold discussions with regional officials on mutual economic cooperation and investment promotion more »

The Banker awards three prizes to RZB Group

"Bank of the Year 2004" in Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Albania more »

Dominet Bank's bond issue breaks new ground

Dominet Bank (Poland) has received the green light from the Banking Supervision Commission to credit a bond issue to its own funds more »

Indo-Romanian Trade To Touch $1 Bln-mark By March 2007

Coinciding with Romania’s entry into the European Union (EU), its trade with India will be touching the $1 billion mark by the end of March 2007 more »

Brussels criticised over recovery of CAP fraud

Three quarters of the 3.1 billion euro squandered in irregular agricultural payments from 1971-2002 has not been recovered due to inefficiencies at both Member State and Commission level more »

Catching up

Breaching the East-West Economic Divide more »

Crude Oil Little Changed After Rise on Russian Export Concern

Crude oil was little changed in New York after rising to a one-month high yesterday more »

Czech carrier joins European carrier alliance

Czech mobile carrier Eurotel Praha has joined the group, increasing its membership to 11 operators with more than 53 million subscribers more »