Special Report: Global Financial
Crisis
BRUSSELS, Nov. 19 (Xinhua) -- European Union (EU)
farm ministers worked overnight on Wednesday to seek an agreement on a major
reform of the EU's controversial farm subsidies.
As the closed-door talks were still going on, the
farm ministers had to decide on whether to further break the link between farm
subsidies and production and thus allow farmers to follow market signals to the
greatest possible extent.
While 90 percent of EU farm subsidies, which cost
more than 40 billion euros (50 billion U.S. dollars) a year, are currently
decoupled from production, the European Commission proposed in May to remove the
remaining coupled payments, with only a few exceptions.
Meanwhile, aid to farmers will be linked to the
respect of environmental, animal welfare and food quality standards. Farmers who
do not respect the rules face cuts in their support.
Among a range of measures, EU farm ministers also
need to agree on the abolition of arable set-aside and a gradual increase in
milk quotas before they are abolished in 2015.
The Commission already proposed last September for a
temporary drop of EU rules requiring grain farmers to leave ten percent of their
land uncultivated amid a bad harvest and higher food prices. This time, the
set-aside requirement would be permanently discarded.
France, which hold the EU rotating presidency, along
with other major agricultural producers including Germany, Poland and Ireland,
are reluctant to see a dramatic change of the current system, but EU Farm
Commissioner Mariann Fischer Boel is pushing for further reforms.
As EU farm ministers were gathering, almost 10,000
tobacco and farm workers held protests in Brussels against possible cut of the
subsidies they could receive.
The European Parliament called on Wednesday for a
smaller cut in farm aid and a limited increase in milk quotas as well as a
special aid for milk producers and livestock farmers.
