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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 15 January 2026
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Displaying 2667 contributions

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Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

CAP rates are set in legislation. We are dealing with the legacy of the CAP, which is why the rates are in legislation.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

I will let James Muldoon try to make things clearer.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

Well, all that I can tell you is that, for as long as I am the minister, I will be absolutely committed to ensuring that we allow farmers to farm in less favoured areas. I am well aware of what that feels and looks like.

The purpose of the SSI is not to be duplicitous or to hide anything. It merely gives us the ability to continue to make payments under this particular programme up until 2030, but the likelihood is that things will change as the policy develops in conjunction with full consultation with the industry. That is all that I can say. I cannot give any more of a guarantee than that.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

We will be at the ARIOB meeting tomorrow and LFASS is on the agenda. We will be discussing what the early iterations of that look like. Is that on the agenda tomorrow?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

What do you mean by where it will be used?

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

That is not what today is about.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

The rebasing argument is on-going. I know that some committee members have been approached about it and that some farmers wish payments to be rebased. That is an on-going conversation. At one point, the NFUS brought it to a conversation in a committee—I cannot remember which committee—and it wrote to the cabinet secretary to ask her to carry out rebasing. The idea was rejected at that point, because we were looking at the whole structure of the policy programme for the future. I am more than happy to look at every potential opportunity to make the best use of the funding that we have to make it work in the best way possible, which goes back to the point that I made at the start.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

We will look at all the opportunities to allow us to pay in the best way for the less favoured areas, and that is still up for discussion.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

No. As I said, the programme is on-going. The ARIOB is meeting again tomorrow—it meets regularly—to flesh out what we are going to try to deliver. This SSI is purely about making available the mechanism to be able to pay. That is it.

Rural Affairs and Islands Committee

Subordinate Legislation

Meeting date: 25 September 2024

Jim Fairlie

I concur with what you have said about abattoirs, particularly in island areas, and if we could do more to help that situation, I would absolutely get on board with that. However, the SSI is about protecting human health and ensuring that nothing has been added to animals and animal products. Abattoirs already have to comply with the measures, so bureaucracy wise, the SSI will not make any difference.

I get that there will be a cost increase—and percentage wise, it looks like a lot—but as far the cost to a small abattoir is concerned, I think that, given that it applies on a cost-per-animal basis, it will not be enough to put that abattoir over the edge, as it were. As a result, there was no need for a separate island impact assessment.