DEFRA farming minister Jim Paice with secretary of state Caroline Spelman and parliamentary under secretary Lord Henley

DEFRA farming minister Jim Paice with secretary of state Caroline Spelman and parliamentary under secretary Lord Henley

The government has begun a consultation under the Task Force on Farming Regulation as it looks to chop regulatory burdens on farmers and growers.

Wide-ranging examples of red tape and gold-plated regulations will form part of the National Farmers’ Union (NFU)’s submission to government.

The new industry-led task force was launched by agriculture minister Jim Paice back in June and will be headed up by former NFU director general Richard Macdonald. He will be responsible for a detailed review of the relevant regulations and their implementation, with the task force seeking to make the system of regulation surrounding food and farming more risk-based in the future.

Over the past few years, the NFU has identified areas of regulation that it believes could be improved. They include reducing the burden of on-farm inspections through greater co-ordination and data sharing between government departments.

It also believes a change to the fly-tipping regulations to allow farmers to remove fly-tipped waste from their private land without the need to pay licensed waste carriers or landfill charges. This would help cope with the estimated £47 million cost resulting from illegal tipping on private land, the NFU claims.

The union also claims a removal of hedgerow regulations could also help as hedgerow-loss is “no longer a problem [and] this outdated regulation could be scrapped”.

NFU president Peter Kendall said: “Farmers repeatedly cite the cumulative burden of regulation as a key barrier to increased productivity. The NFU has long lobbied for a reduction in costly red tape arguing that moving to a risk-based approach is the only answer.

“Farmers and growers have also worked hard at supporting voluntary measures, such as the Voluntary Initiative and the Campaign for the Farmed Environment, as a way of reducing costly regulation. One area where government could streamline the amount of times a farmer is inspected is by utilising the current Farm Assurance inspection.

“We hope the review is able to achieve its aims and ensure the regulatory environment for the agricultural industry is focused on outcomes, risk-based solutions and proportionate enforcement. This will help to ensure we have a competitive food and farming industry in the future. We look forward to engaging with DEFRA and the Task Force over the coming weeks.”