Driving Farmers to
Market
07/02/05
The National Beef Association (NBA) and Tenant Farmers Association
(TFA) have published a blueprint for reconnecting farmers with
consumers.
They commissioned a report from British Agriculture Marketing
(BAM) titled "Farming Industry Marketing Strategy" which
exposes the market barriers faced by the farming industry and highlights
the urgent need for a coherent food and farming policy designed
so farmers can reconnect with consumers and generate a healthy
food culture in the UK.
The Report:
" Reveals the challenges faced by the food and farming industry
including recent CAP reform, supermarket dominance, lack of coherent
policy, contradictory strategies and government inaction. " Highlights
the key issues preventing reconnection with the market such as
State Aid Rules, poor Country of Origin labelling, and inadequate
marketing expertise " Presents a marketing strategy outlining
the practical steps that need to be taken by government and farmers
to create a healthy food culture in the UK.
It is unfortunate that farmer-led projects that would help reconnect
with the consumer to create a healthy food culture in the UK are
blocked by DEFRA under EU State Aid Rules.
Under article 28 of the EU Treaty, these prevent a member state
from promoting its own food produce within its home country based
on country of origin. In the UK the rules govern £79m of
levy money and £200m across the industry per annum.
The report shows how DEFRA's over zealous policing of State Aid
Rules is failing to exploit the opportunities taken by many other
EU countries. The French government, by contrast, has recently
funded a national week celebrating French food in schools, a campaign
for home-grown apples and it has registered 135 protected products
under the EU's quality assurance scheme, 100 more than in the UK.
In comparison UK farmers suffer from lax country of origin labelling.
It is either absent or misleading because it is also allowed on
food produced abroad but packed in the UK (e.g. chicken from Thailand
and beef from Argentina or Brazil).
This is despite growing consumer interest in provenance, which
is linked to a perception of higher animal welfare, environmental
and food safety standards in the UK as well as a positive desire
to buy British. Clear mandatory country of origin labelling would
benefit British farmers by enabling them to promote their higher
quality produce and premium price.
The report also outlines how the farming industry needs to increase
market share for higher quality farm produce through all routes
to market and by stimulating consumer demand. The marketing activity
should be on a national and regional level, be consumer facing,
and requires government funding to deliver what is needed quickly
enough. (2)
The strategy recommendations include:
" A national campaign of consumer awareness including a Food
and Farming Fair, a Food and Farming magazine and a schools education
programme " A Farmer's Marketing Information Centre to provide
consumer market research and to give advice and marketing assistance. " More
farmer-led marketing activity including brand development and the
establishment of new retail ventures such as farmer supermarkets.
Tenant Farmers Association, chief executive George Dunn said, "The
UK's increasing dependency on food from abroad can only be improved
by levelling the playing field for British farmers. This is by
far the biggest issue facing British agriculture. It certainly
was before CAP reform and that has only added to the urgency for
the implementation of a new strategy. For the first time the recommendations
of this report give us a coherent blueprint for that strategy."
"If more consumers were aware of the stature and provenance
of UK beef compared with imports from outside the EU, and more
effort was made to make sure they understood this, they would buy
more of the home made product," said NBA chief executive,
Robert Forster. "This would reinforce the contribution cattle
make to good environmental and landscape maintenance within the
UK itself, reduce food miles and other serious environmental damage
elsewhere, and also make it easier to establish closer links between
producer and consumer."
Many in the farming industry broadly welcomed the Curry Commission's
report (Jan 2002), which clearly stated the key to solving the
problems faced by farmers was the issue of reconnection; reconnect
farming with its markets, reconnect the food chain and the countryside
and reconnect consumers with what they eat and how it is produced.
While many of the proposals recommended by the Curry Commission
have been advanced, there has been little progress yet on this
central theme. This report is designed to assist in the development
of a strategy to advance the reconnection required for a thriving
farming sector.
From January 1 this year, Common Agricultural Policy reform and
the removal of decades of direct farm support linked to production
obliges all sectors of the farming industry to become market focussed
overnight.
At the same time, the current production shift to those areas
of the world where food production costs, food quality, and environmental
standards are lower than in Britain is unpopular amongst consumers
and is resisted by some in Government (1). This report details
the many ways in which the farming industry can grow market share
and stimulate consumer demand for quality British produce - although
only with the assistance of Government.
CONTACTS: George Dunn, Chief executive, Tenant Farmers Association.
Tel: 0118 930 6130 or 07721 998 961 Robert Forster, Chief executive,
National Beef Association. Tel: 01830 520 131 or 07971 589 772
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