Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber
Irish Farmers Association:

"Budget has to support the horticulture sector"

At a meeting of IFA’s Horticulture Committee with Minister Pippa Hackett, IFA President Tim Cullinan called on the Irish government to increase support to develop the horticulture sector.

“This must start in next week’s Budget, where the funding for the Scheme of Investment Aid for the Development of the Commercial Horticulture sector must increase to €10m. The Budget must also provide adequate funding for the National Food Ombudsman, in order to tackle unfair trading practices at retail level such as unsustainable discounting, delayed payments and tendering of fresh produce,” he said.

“A ‘no-deal’ Brexit will have a major impact on the mushroom and nursery stock sectors. These sectors must be included in any contingency funds provided at EU and Government level in the event of a negative outcome,” he said.

IFA Horticulture Chairman Paul Brophy said, “there is major potential for the sector to expand in view of the current trends in eating habits and the emphasis on local, sustainable production. Current efforts to develop the apple sector are a prime example of an initiative which should be supported and replicated”.

In relation to the retail environment, the Horticulture Chairman told the Minister that the market was effectively broken. “Primary producers are now operating in a market where retailers are refusing to acknowledge the increased costs of production,” he said.

He emphasised that the Minister must now intervene in the interest of Ireland’s food security and the continuation of local production.

Paul Brophy added that issues in relation to peat extraction for horticulture need to be resolved; otherwise the country will be importing peat for use in the ornamental sector.

IFA Soft Fruit Chairman Jimmy Kearns said the horticulture sector – mushroom and strawberry growers in particular – is struggling to find suitable labour from within the EEA countries. He stressed that the pilot work permit scheme must be re-opened immediately along with the introduction of a seasonal permit scheme.

IFA Potato Chairman Thomas McKeown said there were opportunities for import substitution in the seed, salad and fresh chip potato sectors. “The minister must provide targeted financial support to growers in order to develop these subsectors of the potato industry,” he said.

Other issues raised with Minister Hackett included increased funding to the Teagasc Horticulture section; the impact of Covid; the National Strategy on Producer Organisations; plant health issues; and the reduction of excise duty on micro cider production.

For more information:
Irish Farmers' Association
Irish Farm Centre, Bluebell, Dublin 12
+353 (1) 4500266
[email protected]
Publication date: