MEPs Call for Strong EU Farm Policy

EU - To secure supplies of affordable food, the EU must have a strong farm policy that discourages food commodity speculation and helps more young farmers to start up, said Parliament yesterday, 18 January.
calendar icon 19 January 2011
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With worldwide demand growing and 16 per cent of EU citizens below the poverty line, access to food is an increasingly important issue.

The future common agricultural policy (CAP), now being debated by EU institutions, must ensure food security for all citizens, maintain the vitality of rural areas and guarantee food production throughout the EU, say Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) in a resolution drafted by Daciana Octavia Sârbu (S&D, RO), and approved in plenary on 18 January.

The future CAP must also ensure that citizens have access to adequate supplies for affordable food, help to disseminate information about healthy diets and improve conditions for programmes such as school fruit and school milk, add MEPs.

Fighting speculation

MEPs point out that food commodity derivatives differ from other financial products, and say that they should be traded only by those "who have legitimate interests in protecting agricultural merchandise against risks".

They argue that speculative behaviour accounted for up to 50 per cent of recent price hikes, and note that wheat contract prices, for example, rose by 70 per cent in only two months.

To ensure that financial instruments help farmers to overcome the crisis, rather than helping speculators to provoke extreme price volatility, Parliament calls for existing EU legislation on financial instruments to be revised, so as to improve trading transparency.

MEPs also endorse the actions taken to this end by the current G20 Presidency.

Incentives for young farmers

The new CAP must also do more for young farmers. Only seven per cent of EU farmers are under 35 years old but 4.5 million EU farmers are to retire in the next 10 years. MEPs ask that measures be stepped up to attract young people into farming, such as installation premiums and subsidised interest rates for loans.

Global food security

MEPs propose the creation of a "targeted global system of food stocks", with some emergency stocks to reduce hunger and others to be placed on the market when price rises threaten affordability. This system could be managed by the UN or FAO, suggest MEPs, who call on the Commission to study how best to make such a system work.

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