Farming MEP delivers EU fallen stock reform
the approval by MEPs in Strasbourg of new rules on fallen stock and
animal by products (ABP) which will considerably relax the current
rules, making life easier for Scots farmers and sweating further value
from the "fifth quarter".
The package passed by a massive 391 votes to 3.
Smith was the Draftsman for the Agriculture Committee on the
package, which was led by the Draftsman for the Environment Committee
German Christian Democrat Horst Schnellhardt. The Schnellhardt Report
provides a clear path for new technologies concerning on-farm temporary
containment of fallen stock to be approved, in particular the research
by Bangor University into biodigestors which can store fallen stock for
months at a time and safely degrade the remains into waste. The new
legislation thus promises to save farmers considerable time, effort and
money.
The new animal by products legislation also provides valuable
incentives for the conversion of such materials into biogas, with all
ABP of Category 2 or below eligible for biogas plants. Furthermore,
valuable by-products of the above process such as biodiesel will now be
placed on the market without further restrictions, as the legislation
clarifies the end point of the manufacturing chain. This will provide a
valuable boost for Scottish manufacturers. The laws have also been made
much more flexible and adaptable in response to new scientific evidence.
Speaking after the vote, Smith said:
"It is rather fitting that in one of our last pieces of business
before we break for the elections in June we should approve a package
of what I would call 'classic European Parliament' legislation.
"While I have immersed myself in this subject to a rather
frightening extent, and can now give chapter and verse on the
regulations concerning blood, bone, spinal columns, skin, hair, hooves
and all manner of other by products, even at my most feverishly
enthusiastic I recognise that this is unlikely to be a topic of
conversation over a Friday night pint for many Scots this evening as I
myself wend my weary way back from Strasbourg.
"Yet that should not disguise the fact that this package is a real
step forward and is the culmination of a lot of hard work in which I
can say hand on heart that Scotland's voice has been to the fore. It is
good news for farmers, abattoirs and the biofuel and recycling sectors,
so good news also for consumers and the rural economy as a whole as
well as in the fight against climate change. There is nothing here to
dislike, and while I am not necessarily looking for a ticker tape
parade at Edinburgh airport this evening it is a shame that most EU
citizens are not aware of the good work this European Parliament does
on their behalf.
"The new rules in particular bring the fallen stock regs into
sharper focus, with new derogations for remote areas and new
technologies for on farm containment. While my only reservation is that
I would have liked to see a wider set of criteria in the EU package, I
have no doubt that the Scottish government under Richard Lochhead will
push this flexibility to the very limit."
