17/03/09

NFU Press Release: Hopes rise as ministers get set to revisit sheep EID rules

Plans to introduce compulsory electronic identification (EID) and the individual recording of sheep will be re-examined following sustained pressure by the NFU, NFU Cymru, NFU Scotland and the Irish Farmers Association.

The whole issue will now be revisited by EU farm ministers when they meet later this month in Brussels.  Ministerial reconsideration of the issue is the only viable vehicle for over-turning the new rules, according to the unions.

The farming unions understand that a paper by the Hungarian government has been officially tabled for the Council of Agricultural Ministers meeting in Brussels on March 23 and 24.  It calls for the abandonment of current mandatory demands to electronically record the individual identities of sheep every time they move.

After meetings attended by the four farming organisations in Brussels this week, it is believed that the German government will join the UK and Irish governments in support of this at the Council of Ministers meeting. Dialogue is continuing at home and across Europe to secure as much support as possible to overturn the regulation.

“Six months ago nobody would have believed EU ministers would agree to re-examine compulsory electronic identification and individual recording of sheep,” said NFU Livestock Board Chairman Alistair Mackintosh who farms in Muncaster, Cumbria.

“The Commission appeared to be intransigent, constantly informing us that the regulation had to be implemented. Many industry leaders and opinion formers told the NFU it had absolutely no chance of progressing the fight. However, we have come further than many could have imagined and have been vindicated in our stance so far. And we will continue to fight as I see no reason for giving up now.”

In a joint statement, the NFU, NFU Scotland, NFU Cymru and the IFA, said: “All hopes are now on the Council of Ministers meeting in six days time. The move from the Hungarian government offers the opportunity for our own governments to turn their words of support for us into meaningful and robust action.

 “The unions will be in Brussels for the Agriculture Council meeting but there is a huge amount of work required in the run-up, both by our own governments and ourselves, to secure as much political support across the rest of Europe as we can.

“This breakthrough has been the result of tireless work on this issue and discussion with our European counterparts. However, over the next few days this work will enter its most important phase. Ministers must realise that failing to overturn these proposals is not an option.”