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Farmers warn Labour’s net zero ‘fertiliser tax’ will push up food prices

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By Paul Homewood

 

h/t Ian Magness

More Labour lunacy:

 

 

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Labour has been accused of dealing another Budget blow to farmers with its so-called “fertiliser tax”.

In the Budget, Chancellor Rachel Reeves confirmed plans to introduce a levy on key agricultural imports such as fertiliser in order to meet net zero goals.

The carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), due to begin in 2027, will tax carbon-emitting imports such as fertiliser, cement, aluminium and products from the hydrogen and steel industries.

It comes amid outrage over the Chancellor’s £1 million cap on agricultural property relief, nicknamed the “family farm tax”, also introduced in the Budget.

The carbon tax on fertiliser is expected to be set at around £50 to £75 per tonne.

Government sources said they expect the impact on farmers to be modest and for there to be no effect on food prices.

But farmers disagree, warning it could hurt business and feed through to supermarket shelves.

David Walston of Thriplow Farm, a 900-hectare family farm, told The Telegraph’s Daily T podcast that the carbon tax on fertiliser had been introduced “under the radar” compared to the controversial changes to agricultural property relief.

“They are going to be putting a tax on imported fertiliser because fertiliser is the biggest carbon dioxide source of food production,” he said.

“Obviously the philosophy is we want to reduce that, so let’s tax the fertiliser. Well, you know, if you tax fertiliser, you make it more expensive. We’re going to use less of it.

“That means we’ll produce less food. We’re not going to eat less food in this country, so we’re just going to import it from a country that doesn’t tax fertiliser.”

Lord Fuller, chairman of the liquid fertiliser firm Brineflow, said: “This is a £150 million raid on farmers who will find it very difficult to pass that cost on through increased grain sales as they are traded on global markets.”

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/11/09/budget-fertiliser-tax-raise-food-prices-warn-farmers/


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