Farmers warn of ‘major issues’ with Government’s flooding recovery fund

The National Farmers’ Union said members with 90% of their land saturated or underwater have been told they are not eligible for funding.
Flooded fields on the outskirts of Gloucester in January (Ben Birchall/PA)
PA Wire
Emily Beament11 April 2024
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Agricultural leaders have hit out at “major issues” with a fund aimed at farmers who suffered severe impacts from flooding at the beginning of the year.

The Government announced on Tuesday that grants of between £500 and £25,000 under the farm recovery fund would be paid to farmers hit by “uninsurable damage” from Storm Henk in early January.

The funding will help farmers restore land to the condition it was in before heavy flooding due to Henk.

The National Farmers’ Union – which is warning of a building crisis in the agricultural sector due to the ongoing bad weather which has battered the country with heavy rain, winds and flooding – initially welcomed the scheme.

We are hearing from numerous members who have suffered catastrophic impacts who have been told they are not eligible for the fund

Rachel Hallos, NFU

But NFU vice president Rachel Hallos said on Thursday it had “very quickly become clear that there are major issues” with the fund.

She added: “We are hearing from numerous members who have suffered catastrophic impacts who have been told they are not eligible for the fund because some of their affected areas are more than 150 metres from ‘main’ rivers.

“These include members with 90% of their land saturated or underwater, and huge damage to buildings and equipment.”

She said the farming body was taking the issue up with the Environment Department (Defra) urgently.

“I cannot believe this is what ministers intended when they launched the fund, which was a welcome and well-intentioned development which seems to have been fundamentally let down in the detail.

“While the impact of the weather goes far beyond Storm Henk, this could have been a good start but, as it stands, it simply doesn’t work.”

The grants are initially open to farmers, to help them restore their land, in areas where a wider support scheme known as the “flood recovery framework” has been activated, to help farms which have experienced the highest levels of flooding, the Environment Department (Defra) said.

These are Gloucestershire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, Somerset, Warwickshire, West Northamptonshire, Wiltshire and Worcestershire.

Eligibility for funding in Berkshire, Herefordshire, Oxfordshire, Surrey, Staffordshire, Yorkshire, Norfolk and Derbyshire is under review, Defra added.

Eligible farmers are being contacted directly by the Rural Payments Agency, outlining the support available and how they can make a claim.

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