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             22/08/07           
              The NFU is calling for a detailed and rigorous review of the
                Government’s revised proposals for implementing the EU
                Nitrates Directive, after a consultation paper published this
                week revealed that as much as 70 per cent of farmland in England
              could be designated as a Nitrate Vulnerable Zone. 
              
             
            Under the new proposals farmers would be required to have five
              to six months’ slurry storage - a move which would impact
              particularly heavily on the dairy sector, costing tens of thousands
            of pounds per farm. 
		    The NFU says that this might be justified if the measures were likely
		      to produce an improvement in water quality proportionate to the huge
		      costs, estimated even by Defra at up to £48 million a year. But
		      the NFU can see no justification for such a draconian approach against
		      a background of falling nitrate levels in rivers, and a continuing dispute
		      over the science underpinning the Nitrates Directive. 
		    The main changes that the NFU will be calling for include: 
		    
		      - No more land to be designated as NVZ than can be justified
		        by the science, and that would certainly be much less than 70
		        per cent of farmland in England
 
	          - The Government to offer capital
		        grants, as in Northern Ireland, to assist farmers in complying
	            with the new requirements
 
		      - The additional storage requirements
	            and other measures not to apply in those areas which qualify
		        for de-designation under the latest NVZ methodology, or where
		        the objectives of the Nitrates Directive are already being achieved		        
 
		      - A realistic timetable for implementation 
 
		      - A continuation of the derogation
		        from the 170kgN/ha whole farm manure limit so that larger amounts
		        can be applied in circumstances where it is safe to do so
 
		      - The
		        exploration of imaginative alternatives such as anaerobic digestion
		        that give sustainability gains
 
		     
		    NFU President Peter Kendall said: “I am concerned that for some
		      this may be the final straw. I am all for farmers reducing their impact
		      on the environment but we must ensure that affected farms are given time
		      to adapt and therefore can remain viable businesses. 
		    “The NFU is prepared to work closely with Defra on this issue
		      and we will be seeking substantial changes to the action programme and
		      a package of assistance that will help farmers meet the demanding requirements
		      of the Nitrates Directive.” 
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