
Common Agricultural Policy: Irish farmers expecting bad news in overhaul to EU funds
The Commission is expected to merge CAP into a "super fund" along with other sectors, meaning agriculture will no longer have a ringfenced budget.
Advertisement
The Irish Farmers' Association (IFA) said changes to the European Union's farming subsidies are potentially devastating coming alongside potential US tariffs. IFA president Francie Gorman told Newstalk radio that it will impact farmers and consumers who buy their products.
The mammoth CAP is today worth around €387 billion, or a third of the bloc's entire budget for 2021-2027.
Brussels is also set to propose capping the EU subsidies a single farmer can receive each year, in an attempt to redistribute the bloc's massive farming subsidies in favour of smaller businesses, a draft European Commission proposal seen by Reuters, showed.
The document is part of the Commission's proposal for the EU's next budget, due to be published on Wednesday.
Advertisement
The Commission proposal would attempt to redistribute more subsidies to smaller farmers, by capping at €100,000 per year the area-based income support they can receive, the draft said.
It would also progressively reduce the amount paid out per hectare, for those receiving the most.
For example, farmers receiving area-based income support above €20,000 per year would have their subsidies above this level cut by 25 per cent, payments above €50,000 per year would be cut by 50 per cent, and payments above €75,000 by 75 per cent, the draft said.
This is not the first time Brussels has attempted to cap subsidies, to limit payouts to big landowners and agro-industrial firms. In the previous CAP, roughly 80 per cent of payments went to 20 per cent of the beneficiaries.
Advertisement
Past proposals to do this were rejected by EU governments concerned about their farming industries. EU countries and the European Parliament must approve the new budget for 2028-2034.
A Commission spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the draft, which could change before it is published.
Ireland
Coroner rejects calls to refer details to gardaí a...
Read More
The draft would set overarching EU-wide green targets that farmers must meet to receive subsidies, while obliging countries to set additional, locally-tailored conditions.
"The new CAP is to be a simpler and more targeted Union common policy, with more flexibility for farmers and a shift from requirements to incentives," the draft said.
The draft did not confirm the size of the new CAP. Its core would still be direct income support for farmers, which would be "ring-fenced" – meaning it cannot be spent on anything else.
The proposal would merge the CAP's current two-pillar structure into one overarching fund – a move opposed by the influential European farmers' lobby COPA-COGECA. – Additional reporting: Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Finextra
4 hours ago
- Finextra
Sainsbury's sells travel money business to Fexco
UK supermarket group Sainsbury's is offloading its travel money business to Ireland's Fexco. Financial terms were not disclosed. 0 Fexco will take over all operations of Sainsbury's Travel Money, including digital platforms and more than 220 bureaux within the supermarket's stores. Services will continue to operate under the Sainsbury's brand with the company receiving an ongoing share of revenue and rental income. The deal increases Fexco's UK retail footprint to more than 460 locations, making it a top five player in the sector. Bláthnaid Bergin, CFO, Sainsbury's, says: With specialist expertise and a strong track record in foreign exchange, Fexco Group is a strong fit for our business. I'm also pleased to confirm that there will be no immediate changes, and customers can expect the same high level of service they know and trust.' Sainsburys has been withdrawing from financial services in the last two years, selling its retail banking operations to NatWest, offloading is mortgage book to Co-operative Bank, and handing over its ATM business to NoteMachine.


The Independent
6 hours ago
- The Independent
Trump on Hispanic farm workers: ‘They don't get a bad back, because if they get a bad back, they die'
Donald Trump has raised eyebrows with comments he made about farm laborers during a phone interview with CNBC. The President spoke on Tuesday, 5 August 2025, explaining his belief that deported immigrant farm employees are not easy to replace with native-born workers. Farmers have been left short of staff due to the Trump administration's ICE round-ups of undocumented migrants. Trump suggested people who live 'in the inner city' are 'not doing that [farm] work' but Hispanic migrants do it 'naturally'. He then launched into a story about a conversation he had once had with a farmer. Trump says he asked, "What happens if they get a bad back?" to which the farmer allegedly responded, "They don't get a bad back, sir, because if they get a bad back, they die".


Scotsman
7 hours ago
- Scotsman
Trump more like capricious medieval king than politician, says former top UK diplomat
Kim Darroch said the President had turned the Oval Office into a 'reality TV set' Sign up to our Politics newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Donald Trump is more like a capricious medieval king than a modern politician, a former UK ambassador to the US has said. Kim Darroch said the President had turned the Oval Office in the White House 'into a reality TV set'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He made the comments during an appearance on Iain Dale's All Talk show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. US President Donald Trump | Getty Images Lord Darroch was the UK's ambassador to the US during Mr Trump's first term, but quit in 2019 following a huge row over leaked cables in which he described the President's administration as "clumsy and inept'. Mr Trump later called him a "stupid guy" and a "pompous fool". Lord Darroch told the event the President now had a 'slightly scary sense of destiny' after surviving an assassination attempt last year. He said Mr Trump 'was made by reality TV', adding: 'He was the American version of Alan Sugar, Sir Alan, on The Apprentice.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He continued: 'He learnt a lot about how to present himself from reality TV, and I think he has now literally turned the Oval Office into a reality TV set.' Lord Darroch pointed to the Oval Office showdown with Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskyy in February. 'I did notice at the end of it, [Mr Trump] said, 'This is going to make great TV'. So that's become a reality TV show, a daily show for his followers.' Later, the former ambassador told the event: 'He's more like a sort of medieval king in his capricious decision-making, than he is like a modern politician.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad However, Lord Darroch said Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer had proved himself an adept 'Trump whisperer', securing a better deal on tariffs than many other countries. 'So far, against a lot of predictions, Keir Starmer has proved himself really quite an adept Trump whisperer,' he said. 'He's done some clever things.' Referring to the row over his leaked cables, Lord Darroch, who also served as a national security adviser and UK permanent representative to the European Union, said it was better to 'crash and burn' over briefings that turned out to be accurate.