Ecologists and agriculturalists find common ground in the future of farming post Brexit Updated for 2024

Updated: 01/05/2024

Brexit is going to influence many aspects of life in the UK, few more so than farming and the environment. Michael Gove, the secretary of state for the environment, has surprised and delighted conservationists by supporting many of their cherished aspirations. His speech in July 2017 was even described as “brilliant, quite brilliant” by a hardened ornithological blogger.

Defra followed up in January 2018 with publication of their long-awaited 25 year plan for the environment. This confirms Defra’s high environmental aspirations although, as the British Ecological Society points out in their summary of the 25 year plan, it lacks legislative clout.

Meanwhile farmers and environmentalists are eagerly awaiting Defra’s next publication, due this spring – the command paper on agriculture which will presage a new Agriculture Bill.

Brexit opportunity 

This will be needed to replace the EU Common Agricultural Policy which successive UK governments have criticised for expensively supporting inefficient farmers – primarily elsewhere in Europe – and doing too little to encourage better environmental practice.

Brexit does indeed offer a huge opportunity to reset policy and practice. Anticipating these developments, the BES Agricultural Ecology Group convened a workshop in December 2017, drawing together ecologists and agriculturalists, to find out how much agreement there is on the way ahead.

The answer was – a lot. And from that meeting we have produced a workshop report: Finding the Common Ground.

The headline goal, agreed by all, is that there should be an agro-ecological approach to food production including biodiversity conservation. This should maintain land that is productive, rich in wildlife, culturally rich and accessible for the enjoyment of wider society without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.

Public engagement

To reach this goal there was agreement that a focus on the condition of our soil will be vital and impacts on air and water must continue to be reduced.

But implicit in an agro-ecological approach is also a recognition that biodiversity, including within the soil, is an integral component of sustainable food production, not a bolt-on.

We agreed on many of the levers that need to be used and a common theme of many of them was engagement – of the public with the origin of the food they eat and the environment that supports it, of farmers with that public, and of delivery bodies acting for government with both farmers and the public.

There was also a consensus that there needs to be a stronger focus on learning quickly from experience – monitoring of delivery and outcomes with results transparently available, research to test novel ideas and solve problems, and support for farmer learning and co-operation.

Next steps

We think these proposals are pushing at a door which is already ajar – many farmers are already managing nutrients and pesticides more carefully, paying more attention to soil structure, making better use of manures, beginning to question and change intensive continuous-cropping systems and possibly reintroducing grazing livestock.

And we hope that our suggestions may help in formulating a policy which encourages more land managers in this direction and adds some clout to the environmental vision.

The BES Brexit Policy Working Group is concentrating on producing a Sustainable Land Management briefing and our Finding the Common Ground report is a key piece of work feeding into the delivery of this work.

This Author

Steve Peel is an independent eco-agronomist. 

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