Léim ar aghaidh chuig an bpríomhábhar
Gnáthamharc

Grassland Sheep Scheme Expenditure

Dáil Éireann Debate, Wednesday - 25 May 2016

Wednesday, 25 May 2016

Ceisteanna (333, 335)

Martin Kenny

Ceist:

333. Deputy Martin Kenny asked the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine the cost of paying a ewe premium of €10 per head where stocking density is over six ewes per hectare and €20 where there is a stocking density of five ewes or fewer per hectare. [12225/16]

Amharc ar fhreagra

Martin Kenny

Ceist:

335. Deputy Martin Kenny asked the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine the estimated cost of the re-introduction in 2017 of the sheep grassland scheme based on current stocking rates and numbers in the national flock. [12227/16]

Amharc ar fhreagra

Freagraí scríofa

I propose to take Questions Nos. 333 and 335 together.

The sheep sector is an important component of our agriculture economy and the third largest farming sector in Ireland with over 34,000 producers and an output value of over €230 million in 2015.

It is for this reason that the Programme for Government includes a commitment to introduce a new scheme in support of the sector which, with an estimated expenditure of €25 million per year, will represent a considerable increase on the annual Grassland Sheep scheme (GSS).

The Grassland Sheep Scheme ran from 2010 until final payments in 2015. It required sheep farmers to have a valid Single Payment application with forage areas declared, maintain a ewe breeding flock and submit a sheep census form over the period covered among other statutory requirements on GAEC. Payment was based on the number of ewes declared on an applicant’s census form, the amount of hectares of forage land declared and the type of land declared, be it mountain or lowland.

Over the course of the scheme almost €62 million net was paid to sheep farmers with an average payment of €15 million per year. According to the latest census data available to the Department through the 2014 published census, re-opening the Grassland Sheep Scheme (GSS) in 2017 would cost approximately the same as previous years at around €15 million per annum.

However it must be remembered that it is not the case that the former Grassland Sheep Scheme was discontinued but rather that payments under that scheme have been incorporated into the new Basic Payment Scheme so in effect many farmers are still receiving the benefit of these payments. In addition of course, many sheep farmers are benefitting from the model of convergence applied in Ireland where those with a low initial value will see their entitlements increase over a period of time.

The focus now is on to the design of the new sheep scheme. My Department is currently working on a draft outline of the scheme design with a view to discussing this with farm organisations and stakeholders in the very near future. It is not possible at this point to provide detailed costings from a scheme which is graduated in the way suggested by the Deputy.

Barr
Roinn