19/09/06
        New rules to protect the rural environment and help cut red tape for
          farmers were unveiled today by Biodiversity Minister Barry Gardiner.
         
        New legislation, designed to protect wildlife and landscape and to
          make the rules simpler for farmers and land managers, will: 
            
              - replace existing rules which protect uncultivated and semi-natural
                land from being damaged or destroyed by more intensive farming.
 
              - introduce
                new EU-wide rules which guard against possible negative environmental
                impacts from large-scale work such as adding or digging up field
                boundaries such as ditches and fences.
 
             
            The Environmental
              Impact Assessment (Agriculture) (England) Regulations 2006 will
              boost Defra's efforts to conserve and enhance the countryside alongside
              measures such as agri-environment schemes, sites of special scientific
              interest and existing laws to protect habitats and landscape. 
            Barry Gardiner said: 
            “The new regulations are a good example of Defra making
              law which protects the environment whilst minimising red tape for
              farmers. Farmers found the old rules on uncultivated and semi-natural
              land confusing - the new rules will be clearer, with more farmer-friendly
              definitions, and we have cut red tape by introducing thresholds
              below which the rules will not apply. 
            “The new rules on restructuring will guard against the possibility
              of major negative effects on the rural landscape, but they will
              not catch farmers engaging in routine farming activities. “ 
            The rules will apply when work is likely to cause significant
              damage to the environment, and anyone wishing to do such work will
              have to apply to the new Natural England agency to determine whether
              an environmental impact assessment is required. 
            Notes: 
            The proposed new Environmental Impact Assessment (Agriculture)
              Regulations will apply to farmers and other managers. They will
              apply in England only. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will
              introduce similar legislation in the next few months. 
            The Regulations will restrict the ability of farmers and rural
              land managers to carry out relevant projects on land they own or
              rent. They will apply to: 
            
              - projects which increase the productivity for agriculture of
                uncultivated land and/or semi-natural areas. Land covered will
                either (i) not have been cultivated (physically or chemically)
                in the last 15 years; and/or (ii) support a rich variety of self-seeded
                wild plants and associated wildlife. Activities covered will
                include the addition of soil improvers, increased levels of fertiliser,
                sowing seed, or physically disrupting soil (e.g. by ploughing,
                tine harrowing or rotavating) to make it more productive.
 
              - projects
                which physically restructure rural land holdings. This includes
                (i) addition or removal of field boundaries; and (ii) recontouring
                of land through addition, removal or redistribution of earth
                or other material.
 
             
            Normally, the Regulations will only
              apply to projects over a certain size. For instance: 
            
              - projects on uncultivated land and/or semi-natural areas will
                normally only be caught if the land concerned exceeds two hectares
                in area
 
              - restructuring projects will normally only be caught if
                they involve changes to more than four kilometres of field boundaries;
                movements of more than 10,000 cubic metres of earth or rock;
                or otherwise restructure an area in excess of 100 hectares
 
              - restructuring
                projects in sensitive areas (i.e. National Parks, the Broads,
                Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty or Scheduled Ancient Monuments)
                are subject to lower thresholds of 50% of the values for other
                land.
 
             
            The Regulations avoid overlap with similar regulatory
              regimes by specifically excluding work which is covered by other
              regimes: forestry projects, development under the planning system,
              land drainage and water management projects, removal of hedgerows
              and work on common land. 
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