15 July 2002 INVESTING IN A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE FOR OUR COUNTRYSIDEExtra investment of more than £500 million over three years in sustainable farming has been announced by the Chancellor, Gordon Brown. This will enable the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) to deliver a sustainable future for farming and the countryside and implement the core recommendations of the Curry Commission. Margaret Beckett, Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, said: "I welcome this settlement which will allow us to move towards a sustainable future for the countryside. DEFRA will use these new resources to respond positively to the recommendations of the Curry Commission, working with the industry to ensure we move towards a sustainable future for food and farming. "The additional funding also allows the Department to provide the leadership necessary to deliver its rural affairs remit, working in partnership with other government departments and agencies to improve the prosperity of rural areas and improve access to services. "I also welcome the additional funding for dealing with the major challenge of municipal waste growth, with final decisions to be taken once the Performance and Innovation Unit has concluded its review of waste policy in the autumn, and for flood and coastal defence, allowing us to accelerate our programme of defence building in parallel with reform of administration and funding."
NOTES FOR EDITORS1. The SR 2002 settlement for DEFRA and the Forestry Commission is set out in detail in the following table.
2. The Policy Commission on the Future of Farming and Food, chaired by Sir Don Curry, was one of the three independent inquiries set up following the Foot and Mouth outbreak. It published its report in January, and recommended a range of measures to put farming on a more sustainable basis. 3. The balanced package SR2002 provides to deliver sustainable food and farming includes over £500 million investment over the next three years for:
4. Local authorities are responsible for municipal waste management, and the additional resources for this are provided for in the Local Government settlement. In 2002-03, local authorities are expected to spend an estimated £1.5 billion on municipal waste management. DEFRA are responsible for a £140m Recycling Fund, with the objective of accelerating the growth in waste recycling and composting. DEFRA launched the Fund in 2002-3. Decisions on both additional DEFRA and local authority expenditure will be taken once the PIU study has concluded. The PIU's review of waste policy was announced in November 2001 at DEFRA's Waste Summit. 5. DEFRA is responsible for flood and coastal defences in England, making grants for capital expenditure to various operating authorities (separate funding and administration arrangements apply in the devolved administrations). Local Authorities also have a major flood defence role, with funding through the Rate Support Grant. The Environment Agency also has an important role. In 2002-03 DEFRA expenditure on flood and coastal defence was planned to be £114 million, and that delivered through Local Authorities £280 million; £394 million in total. The Review of Flood and Coastal Defence Funding, which is examining possible new funding mechanisms for flood defence in England and Wales, is expected to report to Ministers in the autumn. 6. There have been several calls to increase flood defence funding in the recent past, including by the Association of British Insurers. The new resources announced here are in excess of the figure suggested by them (ABI press release, 23.5.02). 7. The depressed price of timber in recent years has led to a fall in the Forestry Commission's trading income. Increased Government funding of £15m over 3 years will allow it to take forward its central role of sustainable forest management against this background. 8. DEFRA is the lead department on sustainable development - a separate press notice on sustainable development has also been released (see SR2000/SUST). 9. Having participated fully in the cross-cutting reviews on Public Space, Children at Risk, Health Inequalities, Services to Small Businesses, and Science and Research, DEFRA will play an active role in delivering their recommendations. 10. The Government conducted a comprehensive review of public services - the Comprehensive Spending Review - in 1998. The 2000 Spending Review built on this by setting targets and allocating resources for the three years to 2003-04. The 2002 Spending Review revises these plans for 2003-04 and outlines new plans for 2004-05 and 2005-06. 11. For further details please contact the DEFRA Press Office on 020 7238 1133 or visit the DEFRA website: www.defra.gov.uk. |