EuropeSouth AsiaAsia PacificAmericasMiddle EastAfricaBBC HomepageWorld ServiceEducation
News image
News image
News image
News imageNews image
News image
Front Page
News image
World
News image
UK
News image
UK Politics
News image
Business
News image
Sci/Tech
News image
Health
News image
Education
News image
Sport
News image
Entertainment
News image
Talking Point
News image
News image
News image
On Air
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help
News imageNews imageNews image
Tuesday, February 2, 1999 Published at 01:04 GMT
News image
News image
Sci/Tech
News image
Plea to save farm wildlife
News image
Newts are suffering as farmers fill in their ponds
News image
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.


News imageNews image
Trusts' Director General Dr Simon Lyster: "Farmers need incentives"
But at the same time the countryside has lost 95% of its wildflower-rich meadows, 50% of lowland fens and 40% of hedgerows - with most of the losses caused by farming.

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.


[ image: Arable farming threatens hares' habitat]
Arable farming threatens hares' habitat
On average, farms now produce three times as much wheat, barley, potatoes and sugar beet per hectare as they did in 1945, says the report's author, Dr Jules Pretty, Director of the Centre for Environment and Society at Essex University.

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".


[ image: Several butterfly species are dwindling fast]
Several butterfly species are dwindling fast
He says that would create new jobs, protect and improve natural resources, and support rural communities.

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:

  • no public support - farmers would sell their produce at world prices and would have to comply only with basic environmental regulations and legislation

  • support for specific habitats - in return for safeguarding features like hedges, ponds, and woodland, farmers would get "a relatively small public payment" per acre

  • "greening the middle of the field" - this would go to farmers willing to maintain 10% of their land as wildlife habitat and to adopt methods that lead to a reduction in the use of non-renewable pesticides and fertilisers

  • special incentives for organic farming and rural enterprise development - this would help farmers making significant contributions to wildlife conservation.

The entire scheme would be voluntary. But Dr Pretty says it has strong financial incentives for farmers to produce both environmental and social benefits.

News image


Advanced options | Search tips


News image
News image
News imageBack to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage |
News image

News imageNews imageNews image
Sci/Tech Contents
News image
News imageNews image
Relevant Stories
News image
06 Jan 99�|�UK
Greens welcome countryside debate
News image
14 Dec 98�|�Sci/Tech
Bee gone!
News image
22 Oct 98�|�Sci/Tech
Species' survival in doubt
News image
19 Oct 98�|�The Economy
UK farmers' tale of woe
News image

News image
News image
News image
News imageInternet Links
News image
News imageNews image
The Wildlife Trusts
News image
The Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food
News image
The National Farmers' Union
News image
News imageNews image
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

News image
News image
News image
News imageIn this section
News image
World's smallest transistor
News image
Scientists join forces to study Arctic ozone
News image
Mathematicians crack big puzzle
News image
From Business
The growing threat of internet fraud
News image
Who watches the pilots?
News image
From Health
Cold 'cure' comes one step closer
News image

News image
News image
News image