Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Defining the HNV farming concept at EU and local levels Guy Beaufoy & Gwyn Jones EFNCP.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Defining the HNV farming concept at EU and local levels Guy Beaufoy & Gwyn Jones EFNCP."— Presentation transcript:

1 Defining the HNV farming concept at EU and local levels Guy Beaufoy & Gwyn Jones EFNCP

2 What is High Nature Value (HNV) farming?  Farming that creates conditions of high biodiversity (diversity of wild fauna and flora);  and/or maintains particular wildlife species of conservation concern.

3 What is High Nature Value (HNV) farming?  The term “HNV farming” dates from 1993 - Nature Conservation and New Directions in the CAP  This report found the common characteristic of HNV farming to be a low intensity use of: Livestock densities per ha. Nutrient inputs (nitrogen) Biocides Land exploitation with “space for nature”

4 Identifying HNV farming at EU level  In 2003 the European Environment Agency began developing indicators and maps of HNV farming (Andersen et al).  Two main types were identified: 1)Low-intensity livestock systems using mainly semi-natural vegetation. 2)Low-intensity arable and tree cropping systems in a mosaic, with presence of semi-natural elements

5 Low-intensity management Livestock Nitrogen Biocides % of semi-natural land cover Grass, scrub Trees Field margins Water bodies Diversity of land cover Crops Fallows Grass, scrub Trees Water bodies Type 1 Type 2 HNV

6 Farmland with semi- natural vegetation: Type 1 HNV farmland

7 Type 1: semi-natural grazing land (Extremadura)

8 Black vulture Nardus grasslands “Cambrionales” Cytisus purgans formations Hay meadows Natural values maintained by mountain grazing

9

10 Typcial mixed dryland landscape of Spanish interior (HNV type 2),

11 Natura 2000 habitats: zWet and dry heathland zBlanket bog zAlpine and coastal grasslands Type 1: semi-natural grazing (Western Isles)

12 Type 2: low-intensity crop mosaics with semi-natural elements Crex crex

13 Crucial actors for nature conservation

14 How is HNV farming important for nature conservation?  Many of Europe’s most valued natural areas are maintained by HNV farming.  HNV farming is thus essential to the success of policies such as Natura 2000.  HNV farming is also crucial to biodiversity outside protected areas.  It is thus essential to achieving the EU’s aim of halting biodiversity decline by 2010.

15 How secure is the future for HNV farming?  HNV farming is widespread in marginal areas where physical conditions have prevented intensification.  But it faces fundamental problems of economic survival due to various factors:  The marginal physical conditions and location.  Specific labour requirements (e.g. shepherding).  Competition from other labour opportunities.  Competing landuses, such as afforestation and irrigation (CAP funded?).  Increasing rules and regulations

16 What needs to be done?  Need a common understanding of: what is HNV farming? how to identify it? and how to target policies to support it?  EU study looking at these questions  But Member States need to take up the challenge for themselves.  Local case-studies should be helpful in building a national picture.

17 Ensuring sustainability of HNV farms  For basic economic viability, farms need support payments (for example, Less Favoured Areas payments).  For long-term sustainability, farms need investment aid and advice.  Farming practices can be made better for the environment through agri-environment payments.  Policies for rural development, nature conservation, forestry, food labelling, should all take account of HNV farming.

18 Conclusions  Supporting HNV farming is not just a legal obligation …  For some countries it can also be seen as an important resource for rural areas.  HNV farming is an opportunity for combining nature conservation with the maintenance of employment and cultural values...  And for the development of new economies, such as “green” tourism.

19 So why this seminar?  Get better understanding at European scale - make sure the HNV farmland concept fits Strandzha  Make sure Bulgarian understanding of HNV farmland is realistic for Bulgaria (especially if EU model flawed)  Reflect on links between ecological and socio- economic processes in Strandzha HNV farmland  Opportunity for different experts to examine implications for policy needs in Strandzha


Download ppt "Defining the HNV farming concept at EU and local levels Guy Beaufoy & Gwyn Jones EFNCP."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google