Title: Farming for the Future Programme
1Farming for the Future Programme
- Jo Bray
- Climate Change and International Team
- Farming for the Future
- Food Farming Group, Defra
- Sustainable Water Management Workshop
- 10 November 2008
2Benefits of Agricultural Land
- Agricultural land provides a range of benefits to
society, including - production of food and non-food crops
- regulation of air quality and climate, protection
from soil erosion and flooding, purification and
regulation of water. - significant non-material cultural benefits such
as land for recreation and valued landscapes - a range of semi-natural habitats, supporting
important biodiversity
3Environmental Profile of the Agricultural Sector
4Defras Farming for the Future Programme
- A farming sector that is viable and sustainable
in the long-term will make a major contribution
to the delivery of Defras two PSA targets on
securing a healthy natural environment and
avoiding dangerous climate change. - The economic and environmental outcomes we are
seeking are embedded the Departmental Strategic
Objective of A thriving farming and food sector,
with an improving net environmental impact. - Farming has a major role to play in delivering a
wide range of other Departmental objectives,
notably in respect of CAP reform, protecting
public health and the economy from animal
disease, animal welfare, the food chain, climate
change, landscape, biodiversity, soil, air and
water quality, countryside access, renewable
energy and waste management.
5Defras Farming for the Future Programme
- New Farming for the Future Programme set up in
spring 2007 - Complements the Governments Sustainable Food and
Farming Strategy (SFFS) the overarching
framework for delivering the Governments goals
for the food and farming industry - The programme is aimed at delivering the
behaviour change necessary to realise our long
term vision for farming
6Vision for Farming
- The vision identifies an English farming sector
in 2020 that - is valued for the quality, safety, and
environmental and animal welfare standards of the
food and other products it makes in other words,
profitable and competitive domestically and
internationally - works together collaboratively to meet the
challenges it faces, and which manages risks - embraces its environmental responsibilities
tackling climate change, managing water, air and
soil and sees them as essential to its long
term economic success, rather than a threat to
it and - is, above all, innovative, self-reliant,
successful, and confident about its future and
which expresses that confidence outwardly.
7FFF Projects
- Agriculture and Climate Change mitigation and
adaptation - Nutrient Management
- Integrated Farming
- Cross-compliance development
- Skills for Farming
- Farm Health Planning
- Strategic development and stakeholder buy-in
-
8Links to other projects / programmes
- Water quality catchment sensitive farming
- Soils policy
- Rural Development Programme for England
- CAP
9Agriculture and Climate Change
- Agriculture is responsible for around 7 per cent
of the UKs greenhouse gas emissions. - Defra has set up a project on Agriculture and
Climate Change and is working with the Rural
Climate Change Forum, and the Farming Futures
communications project to develop and disseminate
advice to farmers and land managers on their role
in mitigation and adaptation to climate change. - The project also includes looking at the
feasibility of a sector emissions trading scheme,
promoting the uptake of anaerobic digestion and
collaboration with other countries including
Germany China to take forward joint work on
sustainable agriculture. It is underpinned by
research into good practice on mitigation and
adaptation.
10Developing New Policies GHG Policy Instruments
Project
- Recently let a project to ADAS to look at
potential policy instruments in greater detail.
Key aims to - Analyse the abatement potential, relative to the
baseline, of current, extended and potential new
policy instruments, including - Regulatory
- Economic (cap-and-trade, project based schemes,
price based changes, grants, environmental
stewardship) - Voluntary (advice / communication campaigns,
voluntary codes, farm assurance schemes etc) - Identify most cost-effective package of policy
instruments (taking account of interactions) - Develop detailed options for the design and
implementation of these instruments
11Climate Change Mitigation and Water
- Agricultural practices for the mitigation of GHGs
could intensify water use, leading to reductions
in streamflow or ground water reserves. - For example, bioenergy crops could have a higher
water use than the landcover they replace - Some practices may affect water quality through
increased leaching of pesticides and / or
nutrients
12Climate Change Adaptation Project
- The overall objectives of the project are to
help - make the agriculture sector environmentally and
economically sustainable in a changing climate
and - protect, restore and enhance agricultural
ecosystems, to maintain the current multiple
benefits we obtain from agricultural land and
help manage the broader impacts of climate change
on the country as a whole.
13How Will Climate change Affect Agriculture?
- All the services provided by agricultural land
are likely to be affected by climate change
directly or indirectly. - At the same time, the ecosystem services provided
by agricultural land will become increasingly
important for human and environmental well being
as the climate changes. - Water is going to be one of the big adaptation
issues
14Evidence Needs
- So we need to know
- how vulnerable both agricultural production and
natural ecosystems on agricultural land are to
negative effects resulting from changes in water
availability (both flooding and drought) - what farmers and land managers can do to reduce
their vulnerability - what farmers and land managers can do to help
reduce negative effects on the natural
environment and wider society e.g. managing
floodwater reducing the risk of water pollution
using water at a sustainable level that doesnt
unreasonably affect the environment or other
parts of society
15Knowledge Gaps Identified
- Water availability and quality
- There is little information on how specific flow
pathways for water transport, and therefore
pesticide transport, might alter under a changing
climate. - It is difficult to predict the effect of climate
change on soil water at regional or local level,
due to the number of different interacting
influences.
16Knowledge Gaps Identified
- Flood management
- The relationship between land use management and
flood risk management can be shown to work in
theory but there is limited evidence so far of it
working in practice. - The distribution, timing and intensity of
rainfall and subsequent water flow are difficult
to model. River flow and flooding will vary from
river to river with local effects on sediment,
erosion and biodiversity. - Cultivating energy crops such as miscanthus in
riparian margins may potentially affect flood
risk. However, further scientific understanding
is needed to assess the potential flood risk
impacts - Can wet woodlands and wetlands be used as an
alternative to some current land uses to
potentially manage flood risks (among other
benefits)?
17Knowledge Gaps Identified
- General
- Studies have been done on the effects of climate
change on some existing crops but not all. - Further information is required on the potential
for new crops that would be suitable under
expected future climate/water conditions - Do we know enough about likely future changes in
demand for water?
18What is nutrient management?
- Nutrient Management is all about the on-farm
management of feed, fertiliser and organic manure
- It is widely recognised that there is a problem
with the oversupply and inefficient use of
nutrients within agriculture and that this has
harmful impacts upon human health and ecosystems - Nutrient Management provides a holistic approach
to addressing a range of interrelated
environmental outcomes - Also addresses problem of Pollution swapping
where policies/activities designed to deal with
one environmental media inadvertently have an
adverse effect on another (e.g. nitrates vs
ammonia)
19Nutrient Management strategic linkages
Nutrient Management is at the crossroads of a
range of environmental outcomes and impacts
Air Quality e.g. IPPC, NECD
Water Quality e.g. CSF, Nitrates
Biodiversity e.g. EBS
Soil Quality e.g. SFD
Nutrient Management
Climate Change e.g. Trading schemes, Anaerobic
Digestion
Fertiliser Safety i.e. Ammonium Nitrate (AN)
20How is Defra responding to the nutrient
management problem?
- Development of a Workstream as part of the
Farming for the Future Programme - Building on work on the Nutrient Management
Steering Group (2004-2007) - The aim of the Nutrient Management Workstream is
to reduce nutrient oversupply in the ecosystem
through maximising the efficiency of the nutrient
cycle on farm and thereby help deliver
environmental outcomes for air, water, soil and
climate change, and biodiversity
21Nutrient Management to protect water
- Careful management of livestock manures can
- limit nitrate leaching to groundwater
- avoid excessive build up of nutrients and
contaminants in soil and - Changing what is in animal feed will change the
manures to deal with. This can - reduce surplus nitrogen being lost to the
environment - limit the unnecessary accumulation of phosphorus
in the soil which will reduce impact on the water
environment and - Following a nutrient management plan will ensure
efficient use of  fertilisers (and organic
manures) and can - limit nitrate leaching to surface and
groundwaters - prevent the unnecessary accumulation of
phosphorus in the soil which will also reduce
impact on the water environment.
22Nutrient Management Workstream Current Project
Organisation
- Project 1 An agreed integrated package of
environmental targets and KPIs (key performance
indicators) for nutrient management - Project 1b quantitative scenarios for managing
synergies and conflicts between the economic
performance of agriculture and the environment
and between different environmental media - Project 2 Recommendations for best on-farm
methods to achieve targets - Project 3 Recommendations for aligning the policy
levers to achieve the targets - Project 4 Requirements for changes in EU
legislation identified - Project 5 Action Plan for delivery against the
agreed targets
23Horizon scanning
- 1 year Govt response to CCCs advice
- 5 years 2013 2nd carbon budget starts new EU
directives, e.g. pesticides - 10 years 2018 3rd carbon budget underway
(2017-2022) effects of climate change will be
felt and more severe reporting on adaptation
changing demand for water in agriculture?