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Key developments in science and technology in agriculture.

 

Defra to review livestock feed controls in England and Wales

Farmers Weekly

5 February 2025

The reintroduction of processed animal protein (PAP) into some livestock feed is on the cards, with Defra now considering changes to regulations that have been in place since the height of the so-called “mad cow” crisis in the 1990s.

The move, set out in a new consultation, aims to support the farming industry and help level the playing field with the EU, where limited use of non-ruminant PAP is allowed.

Through the eight-week consultation, views are being sought on whether those controls which currently prohibit PAP being fed to farmed animals to prevent transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), should be changed.

Defra gives thumbs up to GM wheat trial

Farmers Weekly

4 February 2025

A one-year trial on genetically modified crops by the University of Oxford has been given the green light by Defra. Trial plots are due to be planted this spring, with the study looking to improve yields and stress tolerance in wheat.

Independent non-departmental public body Acre (Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment,) has advised the government that the risks from the trial to human health and the environment are extremely low.

Trial plots will be grown at four different sites in England with harvesting planned for August and September. The four approved release sites are John Innes Centre near Norwich, Niab near Cambridge, and Rothamsted Research sites at Harpenden and Bury St Edmunds.

New Defra scheme urges growers to go for beans

Farmers Guardian

1 February 2025

An initiative hoping to boost bean production in the UK by determining definitive best practice is now underway.

The ability of beans to fix their own nitrogen while also leaving it in the soil for the following crop is well known to growers, making legumes an important break crop in UK rotations.

However, uptake of growing beans has long been curtailed by the perception that they're unreliable, despite the multiple benefits they provide.

English farmland could be cut by 9% to hit green targets

BBC News

31 January 2025

About 9% of England's farming land will need to be converted into forest and wild habitats by 2050 to meet the government's net zero and nature targets. The benchmark was set out in a consultation launched by Environment Secretary Steve Reed.

In total, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) predicts nearly a fifth of the UK's agricultural land will need to change, as part of efforts to improve the eco-system.

But the department insists greater efficiencies on the remaining land could maintain UK food production at current levels.

Tenth of England’s farmland must be rewilded to hit climate targets, ministers estimate

Financial Times

31 January 2025

Almost one-tenth of England’s farmland will need to be converted to low-carbon use such as woodland or heath by 2050 in order for the country to hit its climate targets, according to government estimates published on Friday.

About 760,000 hectares — or 9 per cent of England’s agricultural land — will need to “change away from agricultural land for environmental and climate benefits”, it said. A further 9 per cent will need to change to accommodate climate benefits, such as sustainable farming practices.

Alongside the estimates, the government said that any impact on food production from the land use changes could be offset by using technology and sustainable farming techniques to increase crop yields.

Farmers in bird flu 'panic' call for UK vaccine plan

BBC News

31 January 2025

Poultry farmers are appealing to the government to let them vaccinate their flocks against the "devastating" bird flu virus spreading across the UK.

Vaccinating poultry against avian influenza is currently not allowed in the UK. The government says that strong biosecurity measures and culling are the most effective ways of fighting it. Meanwhile, there are concerns that poultry vaccinations might be linked to the virus evolving.

Overall levels of the virus have not yet reached the peak of recent years. But one farmer, who has previously lost 30% of his flock because of bird flu, told the BBC that, without a vaccine, it was only a matter of time before "it all kicks off again".

Farming policies ‘must support increase in food production’

Farmers Weekly

30 January 2025

Farming policies need to support a 30% increase in domestic food production while reducing UK agriculture’s environmental footprint by 50% by 2050.

That was the message from the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Science and Technology in Agriculture as it launched its 30:50:50 vision in parliament on Wednesday 29 January to mark the start of Agri-Science Week.

Group chairman George Freeman, the MP for Mid Norfolk, raised doubts whether current policies are fit to support such targets and called on the UK government to do better than its predecessors.

Human case of avian flu detected in England

Farming Online

28 January 2025

UKHSA has confirmed a case of influenza A(H5N1) in a person in the West Midlands region. Bird-to-human transmission of avian influenza is rare and has previously occurred a small number of times in the UK.

The person acquired the infection on a farm, where they had close and prolonged contact with a large number of infected birds. The risk to the wider public continues to be very low.

The individual is currently well and was admitted to a High Consequence Infectious Disease (HCID) unit.

British shoppers bin £520 of fresh food each year

Farmers Guardian

27 January 2025

Discount retailer Aldi is urging consumers to think about food waste after it was revealed more than half its shoppers throw away nearly 500 pieces of fruit and veg each year.

According to new research from the supermarket chain, 52% of customers bin around 482 fresh items, which adds up to around £520 a year.

Of the 2,000 Britons polled, 53% said they threw out food which had not even been touched, with 56% admitting that they completely forgot about food they had bought. More than half those surveyed (57%) said they were not confident they fully understood exactly where and how to store food to keep it fresh for longer.

Defra rejects emergency authorisation for neonic on sugar beet

Farmers Weekly

23 January 2025

The government has rejected an emergency application for the use of a neonicotinoid on sugar beet to help growers stave off virus yellows infection.

The announcement makes it the first time in five years that an emergency authorisation of Cruiser SB has not been approved for use on sugar beet.

Defra said that there was 'clear and abundant evidence' that the neonicotinoid was 'extremely toxic' to pollinators such as bees. The application for emergency authorisation was made by the NFU and British Sugar.

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