Foodwise Targets Dependent on Brexit Outcome, Says IFA

IRELAND - Speaking at yesterday's major conference on the Foodwise 2025 strategy for the agri-food sector, IFA President Joe Healy said the achievement of the 2025 targets would be very dependent on what happens in the Brexit talks over the coming days.
calendar icon 5 December 2017
clock icon 2 minute read

Mr Healy, a panellist at the conference, said, "This strategy and the targets it sets were agreed prior to Brexit. The outcome of Brexit will define the future of Irish farming and the agriculture sector.

"The future of the entire agriculture sector to 2025 and beyond is at stake. The Government needs to hold the line and work to achieve a solution where the whole of the UK stays in the single market and the Customs Union or a similar arrangement."

The IFA President told delegates at the conference that there are already huge issues at farm level where the livestock and tillage farmers, in particular, are going through a very tough time.

"For the Foodwise 2025 Strategy to succeed, farmers need to be properly rewarded for their work and investment," he said.

Mr Healy said that despite ambitious targets for growth jobs and exports in the strategy, it includes no explicit targets for improvements in profitability or even viability at farm level. He said output at farm level was being taken for granted.

"Agriculture is our most successful indigenous sector and it is built on the back of farmers. Yet livestock and tillage farmers, in particular, are really struggling. If we don’t address income levels there is a real risk that the raw materials needed to achieve the Food Wise 2025 targets will not be there," he said.

Mr Healy said farm incomes across many sectors remain far too low, with the average farm income just €24,000, and a third of farms in Ireland still classified as vulnerable.

"All stakeholders in the agri-food sector need to face the reality that if one element of the food supply chain is vulnerable, the achievement of the overall strategy is at serious risk. It is in the interests of all in the industry that farmers receive a fair return," Mr Healy concluded.

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