Agricultural fallows: why Europe imposes them

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Agricultural fallows: why Europe imposes them

Fallows are imposed by the European Union, which wants to extend them to allow the soil to regenerate. A very widely contested measure. – (France 2)

Fallows are imposed by the European Union, which wants to extend them to allow the soil to regenerate. A very widely contested measure.

It is an essential rest for biodiversity: fallow, a period during which land is not allowed to be cultivated and regenerates. But, for farmers, it is above all a loss of income of several thousand euros per year. “This plot, which starts from there, which runs alongside the wheat, and which lands in the woods over there, represents 8 hectares. On 8 hectares, today, when I plant wheat, I produce 100,000 baguettes”confides a farmer.

10% fallow land by 2030?

European standards today require that 4% of land be set aside each year. By 2030, this threshold could increase to 10%. A measure which makes certain farmers’ unions jump, but which would only have a limited impact, according to the Confédération paysanne. The fallow is therefore at heart of a debate between ecology and economics. For his part, the Minister of Agriculture is in favor of a relaxation of standards on this subject.


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