Thank you for contacting me about hedgerows.
Hedgerows are important ecological building blocks in our farmed
landscape, providing distinctive character to our countryside and crucial
habitats and food for wildlife. Hedgerows can store carbon, improve local air
quality and benefit the rural economy by boosting job creation for hedgerow
planting and management in local communities.
Protection of hedgerows is a key component of the Government’s
Environmental Land Management Schemes. Through the Countryside Stewardship
schemes, Ministers are supporting farmers to maintain and restore over 10,000km
of existing hedgerows while planting an additional 4,000km across the nation. I
understand that as of January 2024, there were around 35,000 Countryside
Stewardship agreements.
Further, the Department for Environment,
Food and Rural Affairs' (Defra's) new Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI)
hedgerow standard will pay farmers to assess the condition of hedgerows
and manage them in a way that will work for wildlife and improve biodiversity.
I am pleased that SFI payments were increased by ten per cent at the beginning
of this year.
I am assured that this increased support
for farmers will result in the creation of more hedgerows and flower-rich grass
areas on headlands, assisting the UK' progress on environment targets
including halting biodiversity loss by 2030.
I am aware that cross compliance
rules ended at the end of last year. This is because gaps
between cross compliance rules and regulatory requirements are
already covered by existing and ongoing strong domestic legal framework, such
as through generalised provisions in Farming Rules for Water and the Water
Resources Act, guidance like the Code of Practice for the use of Plant
Protection Products, and standards in the Sustainable Farming Incentive
scheme. As a result of these, my Defra colleagues do not believe farmers will
lower standards and there will not be significant negative environmental
impacts in these areas.
Following a Defra consultation on
maintaining and improving existing protections, the Government has set out
plans for domestic hedgerow regulations. The regulations will include a two
metre ‘buffer strip’ from the centre of hedgerows with no cultivation or
application of pesticides or fertilisers, and a hedge cutting ban between 1
March and 31 August to protect nesting birds.
The regulations will support the efforts
of many farmers already carrying out vital work to protect hedgerows, providing
important ecological benefits including wildlife habitats, slowing soil erosion
and water run-off, supporting crop pollinators and absorbing carbon.
Thank you again
for taking the time to contact me.
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