13 May 2024
Clifton-Brown highlights need to incentivise infrastructure investment in farming

Speaking in a debate on changes to agricultural subsidies, Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown raises concerns that if farmers’ incomes get squeezed, it is the infrastructure that is likely to suffer and he calls on the Government to ensure that there are sufficient incentives in the new scheme for farmers to invest in infrastructure such as cattle barns, grain stores and drainage.

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (The Cotswolds) (Con)

I am grateful to my right hon. Friend for giving way, and I apologise to the House for not being present at the opening stages of this debate; I was in the Public Accounts Committee. I also declare my interest as a working farmer. Does he agree that there is a danger in this system that if farmers’ incomes get squeezed, it is the infrastructure that is likely to suffer? Will he make sure that there are sufficient incentives in the new scheme for farmers to invest in infrastructure—in cattle barns, in grain stores and in drainage? These sorts of things are likely to suffer and therefore productivity could also suffer.

The Minister for Food, Farming and Fisheries (Sir Mark Spencer)

I am grateful for that intervention. That is why we are offering grant schemes for such infrastructure projects. For example, there will be grant schemes to improve on slurry infrastructure, on calf housing and on beef housing, to make sure that we not only invest in that infrastructure, but do it in a way that is sensitive to our environmental and animal welfare footprints. That is exactly what we are trying to achieve. While I am talking about infrastructure, it is also vital to the rural economy that we support things such as local abattoirs to ensure that they are there for the future. We have introduced the abattoir support scheme for those small abattoirs, to make sure that that infrastructure is in place to support the farming network as we move forward.

Hansard