Dáil debates

Thursday, 18 May 2006

4:00 pm

Photo of Mary CoughlanMary Coughlan (Donegal South West, Fianna Fail)

The report of the joint committee covered a range of issues and I responded to it in detail. A number of the committee's recommendations are precluded by the EU regulations under which the current scheme and its predecessor operate. I saw some merit in certain other aspects of the committee's report, specifically those relating to income limits and the maximum age of transferees in the current scheme. However, this scheme will close to new applications in December and the practical effect of any such changes would now be very small.

The committee paid particular attention to two issues. One was the implications of decoupling for retired farmers who had leased out quota as well as land to transferees during the single payment reference period. We have secured the best deal we could for people in this situation, in spite of the fact that the Commission was unsympathetic at the outset. In family cases, where a farm reverted to the retired farmer at the end of a lease without any entitlements, a family member taking it over will have access to the national reserve. Retired farmers in the current scheme who farmed during the reference period can activate entitlements and lease them to their transferees. At the end of the lease they can either sell the entitlements with or without land or lease the entitlements with land.

The other issue the joint committee focused on was the levels of payment under the two schemes. The European Commission has repeatedly ruled out the idea of indexation in the current scheme and has pointed out that the rate in the earlier scheme was set at the maximum amount for co-funding that the regulation allowed.

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