Cautious green light from the House of Representatives for Adema fertilizer plans

Cautious green light from the House of Representatives for Adema fertilizer plans
Cautious green light from the House of Representatives for Adema fertilizer plans
--
ANP
Outgoing ministers Piet Adema (Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality) in a debate with the House about manure policy. This included the plans that Adema recently presented to combat the manure crisis in the Netherlands.

NOS Newstoday, 5:06 PM

A majority in the House of Representatives gives Minister of Agriculture Adema the cautious green light to develop his measures against the manure problem. He wants to buy out farmers by the billions and reduce their livestock. The forming parties NSC and VVD also say that the minister must continue, because the manure problem is too big to do nothing.

However, they are cautious about how much money this may cost and want to take a critical look at Adema’s final plan. “For decades we have not fulfilled our agreements and at some point we have to pay the price for that,” says VVD MP Van Campen.

BBB, the third forming party, today announced its own plan against the manure problem. This was derided by some parties as being unrealistic.

Storage tanks in port areas

For example, BBB wants to store excess manure in locations throughout the country. For example, in manure bags on farms, in empty manure cellars of retired farmers or in empty storage tanks in port areas.

“Empty storage tanks in port areas? Where are those storage tanks located?” asks GL-PvdA MP Bromet. BBB does not know that yet, it still needs to be found out. “They are indeed all band-aids,” admits BBB MP Pierik.

“How can BBB propose this as a party that has ‘Boer’ in its name? This seems like driving straight into a wall,” says D66 MP Podt. The Christian Union also notes that there is support for Adema’s plans, but not for those of BBB. “How does BBB want to make this happen,” says MP Grinwis.

Earlier in the debate, NSC MP Holman outlined how much manure is involved. “400,000 truckloads. That’s 15 billion liters of manure. If you want to store that, you need 15,000 silos of 1,000 cubic meters. And next year it will be even more.”

Ground and surface water

Too much manure pollutes ground and surface water. The Netherlands therefore does not comply with the EU agreement on water quality. Dutch farmers will therefore be allowed to spread less manure from this year onwards. They are now left with full manure cellars and pay high disposal costs. There are threats of sanctions and fines from the EU if the Netherlands does not take measures.

Adema wants less manure by reducing the livestock herd. For example, by allowing farmers to voluntarily stop with financial compensation. He is also considering introducing stricter rules for the number of cows per hectare. Farmers must also receive income compensation for this. Furthermore, the number of rights to emit phosphate through manure would be reduced, also for the pig and poultry sectors.

Various factions think that it only makes sense to ask Brussels for understanding and more time for farmers once there is a strong package of measures in place and the Netherlands tackles the problem seriously after years.

The article is in Netherlands

Tags: Cautious green light House Representatives Adema fertilizer plans

-

NEXT Binance founder gets four months in prison for violating anti-money laundering law – IT Pro – News