Written answers
Wednesday, 19 March 2025
Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine
Departmental Regulations
Michael Cahill (Kerry, Fianna Fail)
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1246. To ask the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine to address,as a matter of priority, the concerns of tens of thousands of farmers (details supplied); and if he will make a statement on the matter. [10772/25]
Martin Heydon (Kildare South, Fine Gael)
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GAEC 2 is a baseline requirement and is legally required to be put in place for 2025 as part of the conditionality requirements for the Basic Income Support for Sustainability (BISS) payment scheme. If Ireland does not introduce this standard now, we will be in serious breach of the EU regulations governing the CAP Strategic Plans. This would lead to significant and recurring financial penalties until resolved.
The proposal which my Department has submitted to the European Commission for approval aims to strike the balance between the vital protection of peatlands and wetlands, and the farmers right to continue with agricultural activity on this land.
The proposal aims to ensure this while delivering on the legal requirement to introduce a baseline standard to protect carbon rich soils. Uppermost in my mind has been ensuring farmers can continue to engage in normal agricultural practices while meeting this requirement.
The proposal does not prohibit any of the common practices that these lands are typically subject to. For grassland, reseeding is still possible, as is maintenance and repair of existing drains. New drains are also allowed, subject to the relevant planning legislation, which is already a requirement.
I can confirm that in the proposal there are no new restrictions on fertiliser use. Lower limits for the use of fertiliser (Phosphorus) on peat soils have been in place for a number of years under Nitrates legislation. The standard will not introduce any new restrictions on agriforestry, native woodland establishment, or specific actions under ACRES involving hedgerow establishment and native tree planting beyond those already in place under those programmes.
With regard to the suggestion that GAEC 2 conditions should not apply to the entire parcel, this is not a new approach. It is incorrect to state that GAEC 9 is not applied on a parcel level – that is how controls for GAEC 9 work in Ireland. To apply a different threshold than the 50% rule for GAEC 2 would either pull in far more mineral soils into the standard, or leave too much peat soils outside of the protection of the standard. I believe this percentage strikes the right balance.
The proposed map is well-understood and has been in use for many years. A clear, parcel approach based on well-understood maps is a fair way to ensure that we get the required protection in place without any uncertainty as to the requirements, or where they apply. It is in all our interests for farmers to have certainty.
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