logo
Farming organisations call for more aid for the ‘forgotten farmers'

Farming organisations call for more aid for the ‘forgotten farmers'

Irish Examiner25-07-2025
Following the announcement of the long-established young farmers scheme, farming organisations say more aid is needed.
The scheme aims to help the 'forgotten farmers', a group defined as young farmers who were under the age of 40 in 2015, who were not eligible for young farmer supports under the CAP from 2015 due to the date they had first set up in agriculture.
The IFA and ICMSA have both said the Department of Agriculture needs to do more.
IFA rural development chair John Curran said: "The forgotten farmer scheme is long overdue, but what the department is currently offering falls far short of what the installation aid was in the past.'
'The €5m was allocated in the last budget, with commitments that more would be secured if needed. The minister needs to follow through on this, secure the necessary funding and ensure all forgotten farmers are not forgotten again,' he said.
'All eligible farmers, including those starting out in 2008 and thereafter, should get at least the equivalent amount as they would have received under the installation aid,' Mr Curran said.
The ICMSA's deputy president, and chairperson of the farm and rural affairs committee, Eamon Carroll, noted the ICMSA had advocated for such a scheme for many years.
'This initiative is a long time coming and will be appreciated by those who qualify. However, the eligibility criteria are disappointingly narrow and there will be many obviously deserving cases that will not qualify, as presently set out,' he stated.
Mr Carroll said a significant concern was the cut-off date of December 31, 2007, which will exclude many farmers who did not previously benefit, and are now in their late 40s or early 50s.
'These were people who began farming during a period of economic hardship and who had limited access to any kind of young farmer supports. ICMSA is calling on the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine to extend eligibility to include all farmers who entered the sector before 2015 and who never received young farmer payments.
"The minister can make this important change and ICMSA urges him to do so in the interests of basic fairness', Mr Carroll said.
Read More
Free farmer health checks to be provided nationwide over next 14 weeks
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What are the Landscape Actions and how much will they pay?
What are the Landscape Actions and how much will they pay?

Agriland

time9 hours ago

  • Agriland

What are the Landscape Actions and how much will they pay?

Last week Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine Martin Heydon confirmed that Landscape Actions (LAs) are now open for applications from Co-operation Project (CP) teams in the Agri-Climate Rural Environment Scheme (ACRES). These actions will support farmers in the CP approach of the scheme to target specific environmental priorities, according to the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine. The Landscape Actions are large-scale environmental actions focusing on issues such as threatened species, water quality protection, invasive species management and encroaching scrub management in species-rich grassland. The list of potential Landscape Actions and their specifications is currently in a draft state. It will remain in a draft state until a public consultation process on an appropriate assessment, required under environmental legislation, of the Landscape Actions has been completed. That public consultation has now been launched, the details of which are on the department website. The closing date of this consultation in August 15. In the meantime, the department has published a list of potential LAs, of which there a several dozen. These LAs are outlined in five groups, namely: habitat and wildlife support; invasive species; hydromorphology; scrub removal track installation; and infrastructure. The first three of these groups of LAs require training to be undertaken by participants. As can be see in the table below, this training is itself listed as an action for which payment can be received in those three groups. Payments to cover the cost of taking these training courses is €125 per one three-hour course, up to maximum of three courses. The list of Landscape Actions also includes the payment rate; the action unit (such as a metre, hectare, etc); the maximum payable action units per LA Annual Work Plan (AWP); and the maximum payment per AWP. For AWPs pertaining to registered farm partnerships, the maximum payable units and maximum payment per AWP will be multiplied by the number of holdings involved, up to a maximum of three holdings. The list of Landscape Actions in the five groups are as follows: LA name Payment per unit Action unit Max units Max payment 3-hour habitat support training €125 3-hour course 3 €375 Breeding wader delayed mowing €135 Hectare 15 €2,025 Construction of lesser horseshoe bat roost €963 Roost 2 €1,926 Corncrake early late cover crop €4,665 Hectare 0.4 €1,866 Corncrake early late cover natural €15,341 Hectare 0.2 €3,068 Corncrake delayed mowing/grazing €185 Hectare 15 €2,775 Decommissioning sheep dipping station €355 Station 2 €710 Exclosure €1,562 Hectare 4 €6,248 Geese and swans on grassland €150 Hectare 15 2,250 Permanent vegetation change 0.05ha €1,389 Woodland 2 €2,778 Permanent vegetation change 0.09ha €2,370 Woodland 2 €4,740 Predator proof fence €3.40 Metre 1,500 €5,098 Predator proof fence monitor (<500m) €620 Site 4 €2,480 Predator proof fence monitor (>500m) €931 Site 4 €3,724 Post fire molinia management €840 Hectare 4 €3,360 Removal of conifer treeline (small trees) €8 Metre 1,000 €8,000 Removal of conifer (large trees) €15 Metre 750 €11,250 Rural restorative lighting €351 Light fitting 10 €3,510 Removal of waste from commonage sites €349 Unit 5 €1,745 Targeted grazing (bovines on molinia) €717 Hectare 5 €3,585 Targeted grazing (equines gorse/molinia) €717 Hectare 5 €3,585 Targeted grazing (equines on gorse) €1,073 Site 2 €2,146 Targeted grazing (goats) €1,768 Site 2 €3,536 Virtual fencing €404 Collar 20 €8,080 Dry stone wall full rebuild €12 Metre 750 €9,000 Wildfire-friendly mowing €76 Hectare 15 €1,140 Bracken strimming €835.44 Hectare 2 €1,670.88 Bracken mechanical €242.76 Hectare 6 €1,456.56 Repair of stone walls 2 sides €3.03 Metre 1,000 €3,030 Repair of stone walls 1 side €1.59 Metre 500 €795 Riparian margin tree planting €13.93 Tree 120 €1,671.60 Riparian margin €5.50 Metre 1,000 €5,500 Riparian margin (Sheep fencing) €9.48 Metre 1,000 €9,480 Wader scrapes €265.28 Scrape 5 €1,326.40 LA name Payment per unit Action unit Max units Max payment 3-hour training €125 3-hour course 3 €375 Giant hogweed management (manual) €9,881 Hectare 1 €9,881 Giant hogweed management (chemical) €7,987 Hectare 1 €7,987 Giant hogweed follow up €5,006 Hectare 2 €10,012 Gunnera management €12,157 Hectare 2 €24,314 Gunnera follow up €6,461 Hectare 2 €12,922 Himalayan balsam management €5,647 Hectare 4 €22,588 Himalayan balsam follow up €2,572 Hectare 4 €10,288 Japanese knotweed (foliar spray) €8,279 Hectare 2 €16,558 Japanese knotweed (stem injection) €30,490 Hectare 1 €30,490 Japanese knotwood follow -up €3,812 Hectare 3 €11,436 Rhododendron/cherry laurel (severe) €20,250 Hectare 2 €40,500 Rhododendron/cherry laurel (high) €14,120 Hectare 3 €42,360 Rhododendron/cherry laurel (med) €6,951 Hectare 4 €27,804 Rhododendron/cherry laurel (low) €4,121 Hectare 10 €41,210 Rhododendron/cherry laurel follow up €1,064 Hectare 20 €21,280 Salmonberry management €8,625 Hectare 2 €17,250 Salmonberry follow up €4,350 Hectare 2 €8,700 LA name Payment per unit Action unit Max units Max payment 3-hour training €125 3-hour course 3 €375 Check dam stone €266 Dam Check dam wood €156 Dam Coir roll €54 Metre Ditch/peat reprofilling €6.32 Metre Drain blocking peat plug €74 Dam Drain blocking timber dam €144 Dam Engineered ditch €577 Engineered ditch Erosion control (geotextile) €4 Square metre In-ditch wetland €410 In-ditch wetland Leaky dam €158 Dam Livestock crossing point €1,022 Crossing Restoration action machine €250 Unit 2 €500 Restoration action transport €40 Hour 30 €1,200 Sediment capture pond €317 Pond Swale €23 Metre Water retention structure in karst €376 Structure Wildlife pond €588 Pond 4 €2,352 Wildlife pond (with liner) €1,744 Pond 2 €3,488 LA name Payment per unit Action unit Max units Max payment Machine scrub removal area (high) €2,006 Hectare 10 €20,060 Machine scrub removal area (medium) €854 Hectare 25 €21,350 Machine scrub removal area (low) €360 Hectare 50 €18,000 Machine scrub removal area (high tyres) €2,590 Hectare 10 €25,900 Machine scrub removal 2m linear €0.77 Metre 5,000 €3,850 Machine scrub removal 2m linear (tyres) €1.09 Metre 5,000 €5,450 Area scrub removal hand tools high €14,784.90 Hectare 0.5 €7,392.45 Area scrub removal hand tools med €9,550.55 Hectare 1 €9,550.55 Area scrub removal hand tools low €4,022.16 Hectare 3 €12,066.48 Area scrub removal hand tools scattered €480.97 Hectare 15 €7,214.55 Strip 2m scrub removal hand tools high €2.69 Metre 5,000 €13,450 Strip 2m scrub removal hand tools low €0.96 Metre 5,000 €4,800 Strip 4m scrub removal hand tools high €5.28 Metre 4,000 €21,120 Strip 4m scrub removal hand tools low €1.82 Metre 5,000 €9,100 Track drainage €820 Cross drain 10 €8,200 New vehicle access track installation €5.98 Metre 1,000 €5,984.45 Track resurfacing gravel €2.99 Metre 5,000 €14,950 LA name Payment per unit Action unit Max units Max payment Culverts €476.22 Culvert 10 €4,762.20 Fencing barbed wire €2.60 Metre 3,000 €7,800 Fencing permanent electric €1.52 Metre 3,000 €4,560 Fencing sheep wire €3.44 Metre 3,000 €10,320 Installation of gates €185.61 Gate 10 €1,856.10 Installation of heritage gates €496.61 Gate 10 €4,966.10 Mobile cattle feed troughs €59.22 Trough 6 €355.32 Mobile feed storage bins €175.20 Feed bin 4 €700.80 Pasture pumps €289.04 Pump 10 €2,890.40 Rainwater catchers €716.84 Rain catcher 2 €1,433.68 Solar electric fencer unit €257.50 Solar fencer 6 €1,545 Solar pumps €1,852.50 Pump 2 €3,705 Water storage tanks €798.66 Tank 4 €3,194.64 Water troughs €290.66 Trough 10 €2,906.60 Finally, the following table outlines certain of the above LAs that are considered time sensitive. Depending on when the AWP is approved (by the issue of an approval letter), the applicable LA will be delivered in that year of approval, or can only be delivered the following year:

Milk Price Tracker: Prices mostly steady for June supplies
Milk Price Tracker: Prices mostly steady for June supplies

Agriland

time14 hours ago

  • Agriland

Milk Price Tracker: Prices mostly steady for June supplies

The latest Milk Price Tracker – brought to you by Agriland and the Irish Creamery Milk Suppliers' Association (ICMSA) – details milk prices from the most significant Irish dairy co-ops for the month of June. The co-ops within the Milk Price Tracker are ranked from highest to lowest price for base milk price only. It is important to note that the cent-per-litre (c/L) milk prices shown in the table below are calculated using the widely accepted milk pricing system. The conversion factor used is 1.03, which means that 1L of milk corresponds to 1.03kg of milk. It is Agriland and ICMSA policy not to include support payments, bonuses, or additional payments in the calculation of the base milk price. The majority of co-ops held their base milk price for the month of June, except for just three. For May supplies, a lot of co-ops decided to drop their base milk price, but this month shows that prices have steadied, as many co-ops have reported that dairy markets are generally stable. The general consensus seems to be that global dairy demand remains reasonably resilient, but the increasing global supply is beginning to put future returns under pressure. The uncertainty around potential tariffs and geopolitical tensions are also hindering clarity, according to many co-ops. The milk prices in the table are those quoted by co-ops for the month of June in 2025. The four west Cork co-ops reclaim the top spot in the Milk Price Tracker as Carbery Group held its price for June and Aurivo dropped its base milk price by 0.75c/L. Strathroy cooperative also dropped its base milk price by 0.5c/L, which resulted in Kerry Dairy Ireland, North Cork, Tirlán, and Centenary overtaking the co-op in the ranking as those four co-ops held their base milk price for June supplies. The only other co-op to drop its base milk price for June supplies was Arrabawn/Tipperary cooperative, dropping its price by 0.5c/L. Further details of bonuses and penalties for the Milk Price Tracker can be found by clicking here. With regard to the latest Milk Price Tracker for June, the following explanatory notes (all bonus and penalty payments are based on manufacturing milk) apply. Unconditional bonuses: Lakeland Dairies is paying an unconditional 0.47c/L (excl. VAT) on May supplies - adjusted for solids. Conditional bonuses:

Budget 2026: What farm scheme changes is the IFA looking for?
Budget 2026: What farm scheme changes is the IFA looking for?

Agriland

time20 hours ago

  • Agriland

Budget 2026: What farm scheme changes is the IFA looking for?

The Irish Farmer's Association (IFA) has revealed its submission for Budget 2026, outlining a list of demands for this year's national budget. The submission says that despite consistently delivering food ingredients globally, most farmers struggle to obtain positive market returns. The farm organisation said this is a "derivative of stubbornly high costs of production, increased regulation, and farmers failing to secure their fair share of the value chain". The submission calls for all elected representatives, both here and in Brussels, to work collectively to deliver a "strong, dedicated and enhanced" Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), in its traditional two-pillar format. The IFA Budget 2026 document calls on the government to resist European Commission attempts to "put a knife through the heart of the CAP". It calls for the complexity and bureaucracy surrounding existing farm payments to be reviewed and simplified, with maximum possible allocations to active farmers. It also calls for the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine to maximise all available flexibilities about the design and implementation of the CAP Strategic Plan afforded via the recent CAP simplification package launched in May. The IFA is proposing targeted sectoral supports of €300/cow for sucklers; €30/ewe; €250/ha for a 'tillage survival scheme'; a €100/calf dairy breed calf rearing payment; and a €100/head payment for beef sustainability (on dairy and suckling yearlings). In terms of particular schemes, the IFA is calling for the budget and allocation to the Areas of Natural Constraint (ANC) scheme to be increased by €50 million to €300 million, and for the eligible area for the scheme to be increased from 34ha to 45ha. On the Targeted Agricultural Modernisation Scheme (TAMS), the IFA is calling for increasing investment ceilings for on-farm investments, and for costings to be indexed and/or updated annually to reflect market conditions. Other demands the IFA outlined on TAMS include: Increased resources to swiftly resolve backlog in application approvals and payments; Removal of cow number restrictions in the Dairy Equipment Scheme; Additional items, including grant aid for dribble bars, rubber mats, ATV/UTVs and quad gates; Increased TAMS grant aid of 70% from a ringfenced national fund for slurry storage investment to be made available to all farmers regardless of their Nitrate status and/or current levels of on-farm slurry storage; All farm safety, nutrient management, animal welfare and water quality investment items are to be prioritised; A clear and simplified activity demonstration process for young farmers and women farmers; Significant upward revision for pig farm investments; Solar panel funding should be removed and provided independently of the TAMS programme, with both solar panel and on-farm anaerobic digestion funding having their own dedicated schemes. On the Agri-Climate Rural Environment Scheme (ACRES), the IFA is calling for a "full and urgent review" of the scheme and its implementation. The submission said that there has been a "general lack of faith", and disappointment in ACRES among farmers. The farm organisation is calling for a "fully revamped" agri-environment scheme that provides farmers with a payment of €15,000/year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store