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| Tuesday, February 2, 1999 Published at 01:04 GMT Sci/Tech Plea to save farm wildlife ![]() Newts are suffering as farmers fill in their ponds By Environment Correspondent Alex Kirby Conservationists are calling for action to restore dwindling wildlife to farms. A study commissioned by the Wildlife Trusts says farmers have been spectacularly successful at increasing food production since World War II.
Species in decline include bats, hares, water voles, butterflies, many different birds, toads and newts. The report says wildlife could be restored for just over half the cost of European Union subsidies to UK farmers.
Milk yields per cow have also more than doubled. Dr Pretty says the EU's common agricultural policy (CAP) pays farmers about �3bn annually, of which only about �100m is explicitly for what are called "agri-environmental" objectives. And he says most of this meagre support has been for habitat creation and protection. The report calls this "greening the edge of farming rather than encouraging the whole farmed landscape to become more sustainable". There is widespread agreement that the CAP should be reformed by separating productivity from the payments farmers receive. This would discourage the production of surplus crops and encourage farming that was more environmentally and socially useful. Gains all round Dr Pretty says there can be a viable future for farmers with "a policy framework that integrates support for farming together with rural development and the environment".
The report says: "The key mechanism is an expansion in environmental payments to farmers." It envisages four levels of support, with farmers able to choose which one suited them best:
The entire scheme would be voluntary. But Dr Pretty says it has strong financial incentives for farmers to produce both environmental and social benefits. | Sci/Tech Contents
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