The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe By Dr. Eckard Rehbinder, Emeritus Professor.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The role of agriculture and agri-environment funding in maintaining regional biodiversity Expert-Workshop Gabala, Azerbaijan, 5-6 July 2010 Dipl.-Biologin.
Advertisements

Paul Speight European Commission DG Environment
Federal Departement of Economic Affairs DEA Federal Office for Agriculture FOAG How the Swiss agricultural policy promotes Integrated Pest Management Fabio.
Rural Development Support Team EU Turkish Cypriot community support Producer Groups March 2012.
Zuzana Sarvasova National Forest Centre Zvolen
Position of biodiversity in future CAP Nina Dobrzyńska Department for Direct Payments Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Poland Ryn, 29th September.
1 Module 2: Promoting Compliance with Environmental Law.
10. Workshop ERFP Uppsala, June 4, 2005 ERFP collaboration with EU - Lobbying in Bruxelles Hermann Schulte-Coerne.
References to Economic Instruments in Selected MEAs Matthew Stilwell Matthew Stilwell.
Side Event COP 14 Climate Change Mitigation Potential of Agriculture Poznan, Wednesday 3 December 2008 Fox Room 13:00 – 15:00. Agenda 1.Welcome and Introduction.
Ingo Heinz University of Dortmund, Germany Nature and Economy: An Application to the Rural Countryside Wageningen, 31 May – 2 June 2007 Workshop The EU.
CCB 3rd seminar on WFD 2004 Sustainable agriculture and recommendations for the new EU member states (with focus on water protection) Maret Merisaar Estonian.
Highlight some of the main ways in which the EU has tried to incorporate environmental objectives and concerns into the Common Agricultural Policy Environmental.
Nic Lampkin Institute of Rural Sciences
The reform of the CMO Fruit & Vegetables – Better policy for a stronger Sector PROGNOSFRUIT 2007 Vilnius, Lithuania DG Agri/C.2.
Fedral Agricultural Research Centre Institute of Rural Studies Cross-compliance – Greening of the First Pillar? Heike Nitsch “Nature Conservation and the.
Ministry of Agriculture LATVIA Agricultural reform in Europe: 2013 and beyond May 14, 2008 Tallinn.
Compensating Encroachments on Nature and Aquatic Environment The Example of the German Mitigation and Offset Regime Dr. Moritz Reese, Helmholtz Centre.
Investment in Sustainable Natural Resource Management (focus: Agriculture) increases in agricultural productivity have come in part at the expense of deterioration.
Sotiris Koutsomitros 1 Common agricultural policy 2014 – 2020 Impacts on horticulture Sotiris Koutsomitros Agricultural-Engineer MSc Environmental Engineer.
Why can voluntary agreements between water companies, farmers and authorities help to implement the European WFD and CAP reforms? Ingo Heinz University.
TWReferenceNet Management and Sustainable Development of Protected Transitional Waters in Bulgaria Liliana Maslarova, PhD Nomos + Physis.
Kavala Workshop 1-2 June 2006 Legal protection of Transitional Waters [in the Cadses area]: A comparative analysis Dr. Petros Patronos / Dr. Liliana Maslarova.
Conception for lands of high natural value – international agreements.
Kyrgyzstan priorities in environment protection B. Tolongutov, Director, State Regulation Center on Environment Protection & Ecological Safety Sector State.
Development of Environmental Law in China: Prof. Dr. Qin Tianbao Research Institute of Environmental Law Wuhan University.
Enver AKSOY, MSc Head of Strategy Development Board of MoFAL Policy approaches of Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Livestock to pasture management in.
Wageningen International Introduction agri environment measures Pleven Agri environment in the Netherlands Background Natura 2000 and agricultere Common.
Ministry of the Environment, Conservation, Agriculture and Consumer Protection of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia Agri-environmental Measures in North.
Public money for Public goods A new CAP for Europe’s biodiversity Ariel Brunner EU Agriculture Policy Officer European Division, BirdLife International.
ELO Brussels Conference 6 th & 7 th November 2003 CAP reform: Entrepreneurial Opportunities in the Enlarged EU Paying for environment Prof. Allan Buckwell.
The Principles Governing EU Environmental Law. 2 The importance of EU Environmental Law at the European and globallevel The importance of EU Environmental.
European Commission, DG Environment, Nature Unit
Landscape Related Measures of the Austrian Agricultural Policy for the Period th Landscape and Landscape Ecology Symposium Nitra 2015 Klaus.
RURAL GEOGRAPHY The Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) To protect farmer’s incomes To maintain steady and reasonable prices for customers To increase production.
Commission proposal for a new LIFE Regulation ( ) Presentation to Directors Meeting DK 22 May 2012.
Update of the progress under the CAP- delegated acts, implementing rules, RDPs Claudia OLAZABAL Head of Unit Unit Agriculture, Forest and Soil DG ENV –
“Nature Conservation and the EU Policy for Sustainable Land Management in the New EU Member States” Kilian Delbrück, BMU, Bonn Summary.
Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) European Commission expert group on forest fires Antalya, 26 April 2012 Ernst Schulte, DG ENV on behalf.
07/02/2011Rural Development in the CAP post RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE CAP POST 2013 Attila JAMBOR Assistant Professor Corvinus University of Budapest.
Pilot Project on implementation of SEA for regional planning in Ukraine Prof. Dr. Michael Schmidt Dmitry Palekhov Brandenburg University of Technology.
“Nature Conservation and the EU Policy for Sustainable Land Management in the New EU Member States” Kilian Delbrück, BMU, Bonn A look back at the conferences.
LEGAL AND REGULATORY ACTS OF THE EU IN THE FIELD OF AGRICULTURAL AND RURAL ADVISORY SERVICES Hrvoje Horvat, DVM TAIEX workshop Kijev, Ukraine February,
TAIEX Workshop on Agricultural Advisory Services in the EU Kiev, Ukraine February 2016 Peculiarities of legal regulation of the advisory service.
Objectives for biodiversity protection beyond 2010 A perspective from environmental citizens organisations John Hontelez, EEB Secretary General Athens.
The CAP towards 2020 Direct payments DG Agriculture and Rural Development European Commission.
Resources Conservation and Environmental Protection in the Outline of the Twelfth Five-Year Plan for National Economic and Social Development of the P.
PRODUCER GROUPS AND ORGANIZATIONS IN THE AGRICULTURE OF IN HUNGARY.
Agricultural Policy and Grasslands Jaak Herodes Estonian Farmers Federation.
Common Agricultural Policy European Economics Topic 3.
The EU and International Environmental Law
Environmental policies in Europe
For a more efficient, fair and sustainable Common Agricultural Policy PAC Group, Academy of Agriculture of France, September
Directorate General for Agriculture and Rural Development
7th AIEAA Conference Evidence-based policies to face new challenges for agri-food systems June 14-15, 2018 – Conegliano (TV), Italy Identification of levers.
EU Biodiversity Strategy to 2020 Towards implementation & monitoring
SCP in the 7th Environmental Action Programme
Agriculture and the Environment
Directorate General for Agriculture and Rural Development
References to Economic Instruments in Selected MEAs
Most prominent environmental issues/concerns arising from farming:
The Common Agricultural Policy and the Water Framework Directive
Meeting of the Water Directors - Athens, 17/18 June 2003
The Commission proposal for the CAP post 2013
Rural development support for implementing the Water Framework Directive Expert Group on WFD and Agriculture Seville, 6-7 April 2010.
What does it mean to have a forest in a Natura 2000 area?
CIS Expert group on WFD & Agriculture Nitrates Directive and Water Framework Directive Edinburgh 10th October 2012 Luisa Samarelli DG ENV Agriculture,
WFD and agriculture Putting policy linkages into practice
Point 6 - CAP reform elements for discussion
Leverage effect of PAFs : experience from CAP integration
Presentation transcript:

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe By Dr. Eckard Rehbinder, Emeritus Professor of Economic and Environmental Law, Research Centre for Environmental Law, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 2 1. Introduction - Ambivalent role of agriculture: Source of increase of biodiversity and major threat to biodiversity and climate stability -Synergetic effects between the impairment of biological diversity and climate stability

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 3 2. Major features of the EU Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) In Europe, the degree to which agricultural subsidies take account of environmental concerns, in particular biodiversity and climate protection, is of major significance. Recent CAP revisions: “First pillar”: EU Regulation on Direct Payments (Regulation No. 73/2009): - Substitution of direct income payments for the previous subsidisation of prices and production with their adverse impacts on biodiversity and climate -Introduction of explicit environmental elements (“Cross Compliance”)

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 4 2. Major features of the EU Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) Recent CAP revisions: “Second pillar”: EU Regulation on Rural Development (Regulation No. 1698/2005, as amended by Regulation No. 74/2009): - Agri-environmental measures - Compensation in disadvantaged areas Both elements of the new “green” CAP: important incentives for protecting biodiversity and global climate on agricultural land.

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 5 3. Cross compliance as an instrument to protecting biodiversity and global climate Regulation on Direct Payments: -Direct income payments depend on compliance with certain EU environmental laws or requirements for keeping agricultural land in a “good agricultural and ecological condition” (“Cross compliance” – CC)

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 6 -Certain provisions of environmental directives 3. Cross compliance as an instrument to protecting biodiversity and global climate 3.1Compliance with administrative regulation

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 7 -Independent conditionality for granting direct income payments Conservation of grassland -CC only requires the maintenance of the existing ratio of land under permanent pasture -Does not ensure the permanency of grassland at the same location -Only a decrease by 10 percent triggers individual prohibitions and re-conversion obligations of farmers 3. Cross compliance as an instrument to protecting biodiversity and global climate 3.2The requirement of maintaining land in a “good agricultural and environmental condition”

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 8 Protection of wetlands -Protection of wetlands -Insufficient -Establishment and/or retention of such habitats are optional Intensively cultivated agrarian landscapes -Requirements for the retention of landscape features -But a certain margin of discretion for member states (protection “where appropriate”) -Member state implementation is quite diverse 3. Cross compliance as an instrument to protecting biodiversity and global climate 3.2The requirement of maintaining land in a “good agricultural and environmental condition”

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 9 Other areas -No mandatory biodiversity-friendly agricultural cultivation and grassland utilisation methods -No obligations with respect to the keeping of cattle 3. Cross compliance as an instrument to protecting biodiversity and global climate 3.2The requirement of maintaining land in a “good agricultural and environmental condition”

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Subsidisation under the Regulation on Rural Development as an instrument for protecting biodiversity and global climate Regulation on Rural Development: -Special payments for agri-environmental measures -Compensation for production disadvantages in naturally disadvantaged areas and protected habitats Article 39(3) of the Regulation: -Voluntary commitments must go beyond the CC requirements of the first pillar and mandatory requirements on the use of fertilizers and pesticides (“additionality”)

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Subsidisation under the Regulation on Rural Development as an instrument for protecting biodiversity and global climate In the past: -The subsidization regime focused on reducing the intensity of using grassland and cultivating arable land Article 16a of the Regulation (introduced by Regulation No. 74/2009): -New programme for the protection of biodiversity, water resources and climate - Aim: Earning “double dividends” from measures that both protect plant diversity and reduce greenhouse gases -Financed by “progressive modulation”

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Subsidisation under the Regulation on Rural Development as an instrument for protecting biodiversity and global climate Role of member states: -Specified by the member states/regions on the basis of national and regional strategies There are variances as to the financial equipment, the scope of the programme, the kind of measures to be subsidized, the ecological ambition and the type of areas covered.

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Subsidisation under the Regulation on Rural Development as an instrument for protecting biodiversity and global climate Examples of measures: -Reduction of the intensity of use of grassland -Reduction of the cattle stock per hectare -Management of sensitive or marginal grassland and of ecologically or climatically valuable (although not formally protected) land -Maintenance or promotion of biodiversity -Promotion of organic farming -Renunciation to synthetic fertilizers and chemical plant protection products

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Subsidisation under the Regulation on Rural Development as an instrument for protecting biodiversity and global climate Important gaps: -Measures that are relevant for climate protection -Example: Ecological remediation of denaturalised areas such as drained wetlands and moorland is neglected

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 15 -Stiffening administrative regulation -Enrichment of the CC requirements -Improved financing of agri-environmental measures The choice among these options should be governed by the generally recognised selection criteria. 5. Evaluation 5.1Available options

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 16 Arguments in favour: -Social responsibility of farmers -Equal treatment of agriculture and industry -Polluter pays principle Arguments against: -Strong conflicts between protective goals andeconomic interests of farmers -Long subsidisation history of agriculture -Suggestive force of combining the pursuance of income and environmental policies by one and the same instrument -Large number of actors, high variance of activities and natural conditions 5. Evaluation 5.2Stiffening administrative regulation?

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Evaluation 5.2Stiffening administrative regulation Biodiversity losses are not amenable to high political mobilisation, and even in the field of climate protection measures are presently being preferred that promise an economic dividend besides the ecological one.

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Evaluation 5.3The role of social responsibility and the polluter-pays principle in agricultural subsidisation schemes -The decision as to the conditions under which environmental aids are granted to farmers should be guided by the polluter-pays principle -The structure of these aids should reflect the need to delimit social responsibility for sustainable agriculture from legitimate remuneration of environmental services -Therefore, CC as first choice

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Evaluation 5.4Environmental enrichment of Cross Compliance Advantages: -Large extent of coverage -High obligatory force -Enforcement problems manageable Proposed measures: -Protection of land under pasture: On-site protection of ecologically valuable grassland and grassland that has a high content of organic substances -Reinforcement of the conservation of landscape features, especially with respect to wetlands and moorland -Minimum standards for cattle-keeping, spraying of synthetic fertilisers and harvesting grass from meadows not under pasture

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Evaluation 5.4Environmental enrichment of Cross Compliance Limitations: -CC concept only ensures a generalised minimum protection -Establishment of regional CC standards or attachment to landscape planning legally permissible and advisable -The use the CC concept is problematic where positive obligations shall be imposed or individualised solutions are necessary or more appropriate

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Evaluation 5.5Improvement of subsidisation of environmental services -Better accommodation for concrete natural conditions/ requirements and individual differences in the loss of earnings by farmers Advantages: -Conformity with the modern paradigm of the “cooperative state” -Integration of the motivation and knowledge of farmers -Avoidance of expensive errors in the design of solutions

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Evaluation 5.5Improvement of subsidisation of environmental services Drawbacks: -Voluntarism as an impediment to a coherent conservation policy -Lack of sufficient regulatory means if negotiation fails or the commitments are not adequately executed by farmers -High transaction costs -Problems of financing (level and continuity) -Acceptance by farmers in high yield agricultural areas not ensured and elsewhere decreasing

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe Evaluation 5.5Improvement of subsidisation of environmental services Fundamental problem: -Environmental effectiveness of subsidisation of activities rather than environmental effects -Effects-oriented subsidisation schemes appropriate at least in selected cases Minimum reform requirement: better target orientation -Stronger consideration of priority problems such as seeking synergies between protection of biodiversity and climate protection -Concentration on areas that are in particular need of environmental improvement

The contribution of the EU Common Agricultural Policy to protecting biodiversity and global climate in Europe 24 6.Conclusion Although subsidisation schemes aiming at ecologically and climatically sustainable agriculture are far from being a panacea, for the time being they seem to be at least a second-best solution in Europe.