More News - Company News

Organic farming: lack of funds in Germany

November 18, 2019 at 11:20 AM , Der AUDITOR
Organic
Play report as audio

BERLIN. The government has recently decided to raise the direct payments for environmental services performed by the farmers from 4.5% to 6.0% as of next year. This decision is in line with the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). Although the Bund Ökologische Lebensmittelwirtschaft (BÖLW)…

…which represent Germany’s ecological farmers, processors and traders very much welcomes this step, Chairman Dr Felix Prinz zu Löwenstein also criticises a fundamental lack of funds in the organic sector.

Payments need to be realigned

Löwenstein remarks that raising the direct payments by 1.5% is an important first step. Problem, however, is that in “two years' time, the state programmes will run out of funds to provide all conventional farmers who intend to switch to organic farming with planning reliability”. He also sees considerable problems with the way in which CAP operates and calls to render agricultural politics more efficient in supporting the organic sector.

The aim must be to adapt CAP gradually in a way so that farms are rewarded for investing in services of general interest such as protecting the climate or species rather than for simply owning land. It is important that agricultural payments are realigned, but not melted down as an overall budget. This is the only way in which the necessary conversion can be carried out together with the farms.

EU invests 40% of budget in agriculture

The agricultural subsidies take up as much as 40% of the EU budget. Germany receives EUR 6.2 billion on agricultural subsidies every year. As much as EUR 5 billion are paid out directly and around EUR 1.3 billion are invested in agri-evironmental programmes and in rural development. The rise in direct payments by 1.5% to 6.0% effectively means that an additional EUR 75 million will be available for farmers, who voluntarily render environmental services every year. To compensate for this, the flat-rate direct payments based on acreage will be cut back by EUR 300 per hectare per year.

View related articles

Go to the News Overview
Company News
Feb 15, 2024
LUXEMBOURG. By issuing approval on 14 February chocolate and confectionary giant Ferrero wrapped up the 2022/2023 financial year particularly sweet. Turnover increased by 21% and the global workforce rose by 14%. While new Nutella products were rolled out in the USA, consumers in Europe had a taste for Ferrero-themed ice cream.
Company News
Jan 12, 2024
Dear readers, due to some cases of illness, the publication date of the first AUDITOR issue 2024 has been postponed to 19/01/2024. We apologise for any inconvenience caused.
Company News
Aug 26, 2022
CHICAGO. As Reuters reports the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) had to retract faulty weekly commodities export data on Thursday morning that generated a high degree of uncertainty in the futures market and forced some analysts to have to issue embarrassing apologies to their clients.
Company News
Dec 24, 2021
SEEHEIM. The Mundus Agri team wishes you a relaxing holiday season and a good start to the new year. For this reason, CEO Jakob Megow would like to thank you personally.