24 episodios

The latest news about food, farming and the countryside

Farming Today BBC Radio 4

    • Ciencia

The latest news about food, farming and the countryside

    17/05/24 The Balmoral Show

    17/05/24 The Balmoral Show

    Helen Mark visits the Balmoral Show in Northern Ireland. In the week when the Northern Ireland Assembly has declared the country to be in an ecological and biodiversity crisis, Helen asks the new Minister for Agriculture, Andrew Muir, how he sees farming and the environment working together.
    Produced by Beatrice Fenton.

    • 13 min
    16/05/24 - Water company landscape plan, solar farm planning, horticulture strategy and rural tourism

    16/05/24 - Water company landscape plan, solar farm planning, horticulture strategy and rural tourism

    Farmers are being asked to support South East Water with its new 25 year environment plan - launched this week - which includes creating a new super nature reserve. More than 80% of the area covered by the company across Sussex, Kent, Hampshire, Surrey and Berkshire, is agricultural. The company is under investigation by OFWAT after it was revealed as the worst performer for supply interruptions last year, and some local farmers are not impressed by the new plan.
    Land use and the rules around it are back under the spotlight following new government advice on planning for solar farms. It's made clear that councils should only give permission for panels on high quality farmland when "necessary", and that they should take into account any other solar farms in the area to consider their cumulative impact. This follows changes earlier this year which made it harder to put panels on the 'best and most versatile' farmland.
    We reflect on new Government plans for horticulture revealed at the Farm to Fork Summit.
    And we meet the Northern Ireland sheep farmer who has turned his everyday life into a tourist attraction.
    Presented by Charlotte Smith
    Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Heather Simons

    • 14 min
    15/05/24 - The Farm to Fork Summit at 10 Downing Street

    15/05/24 - The Farm to Fork Summit at 10 Downing Street

    In this special programme, Anna Hill reports from the second Farm to Fork Summit at 10 Downing Street.
    The Government says it wants to increase the amount of home grown fruit and veg - after figures released this week who only 17% of fruit and 55% of vegetables eaten in the UK, are produced here. More money will be released to help fruit and veg farmers invest in new equipment.
    As well as interviewing Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, we hear from delegates who were invited to the summit about what it could mean for food and farming.
    Presented by Anna Hill
    Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Heather Simons

    • 13 min
    14/05/24 - Farm to Fork Summit, Welsh holiday homes and a conservation dog

    14/05/24 - Farm to Fork Summit, Welsh holiday homes and a conservation dog

    The Government says it wants more home grown fruit and veg - after releasing figures that show only 17% of fruit and 55% of vegetables eaten in the UK, are produced here. It's releasing more funding to help fruit and veg farmers invest in new equipment. The announcement come as the Prime Minister hosts his second Farm to Fork Summit at 10 Downing Street.
    New rules in Wales mean holiday-let owners now have to rent their accommodation out for at least 182 days a year in order to qualify for business rates. It's designed to help develop a fairer housing market for locals, but farmers who have diversified with self catering accommodation in old farm buildings say it's bad news.
    And we meet the conservation sniffer dog helping to track down rats and ferrets that are threatening seabirds on Rathlin Island off the North East coast of Northern Ireland.
    Presented by Anna Hill
    Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Heather Simons

    • 14 min
    11/05/24 Farming Today This Week: Sandeels, funding for robotic pickers, crisis of confidence for farmers, European roadtrip.

    11/05/24 Farming Today This Week: Sandeels, funding for robotic pickers, crisis of confidence for farmers, European roadtrip.

    Farmer confidence is at an all time low: that's according to a new survey published this week by the National Farmers' Union. It says the wet weather has had an impact, but farmers also point to worries about the future of their businesses.
    The Government’s announcement that the seasonal worker visa scheme is being extended for five years has been welcomed by farming organisations. It comes as part of Defra's response to an independent review into labour shortages in the Food Supply Chain which was published last summer. The Government had said it would respond to it last year.
    The RSPB says it is "vital" that a UK ban on fishing for sandeels in the North Sea remains in place. The ban, which stops sandeel trawlers fishing in English and Scottish sections of the North Sea, came into effect in April following a long campaign by conservationists concerned about declining seabird populations, particularly puffins and kittiwakes. Fishermen in Denmark are supporting a challenge by the European Union to the UK ban, claiming they have lost half of their fishing grounds because of the new restrictions.
    Cornish journalist and farmer, Stuart Oates, has been taking a European road trip in his fairly ancient land rover, peering over as many hedges as possible. From mangoes in spain to rice in Portugal, he started at the heart of the global wine industry in France. In the UK wine production has become a thriving business, but in Bordeaux things aren't looking so good.
    Presented by Charlotte Smith and produced by Beatrice Fenton.

    • 24 min
    13/05/2024 - Food exports, rural tourism and new Welsh creamery

    13/05/2024 - Food exports, rural tourism and new Welsh creamery

    When Britain left the European Union, the Government said food and drink exporters had a 'golden opportunity' to put British food at the 'top of the global menu'. But the reality is that UK food is still lagging behind its European counterparts, both in terms of sales and reputation.
    Tourism brings £14.5 billion into the rural economy every year - according to the Country Land and Business Association. But while visitors bring much needed cash they also create problems - from the pressure on housing and roads to the challenges of finding enough staff to look after them.
    And we visit a new processing plant specifically for Welsh milk, which is due to open this month. Pembrokeshire Creamery aims to end the journey Welsh milk currently has to take: transported to England for processing and then brought back. It'll be the only large scale liquid milk dairy in Wales, since Wrexham-based Tomlinson's went bust in 2019.
    Presented by Charlotte Smith
    Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Heather Simons

    • 11 min

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