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Defining the HNV farming concept at EU and local levels

Defining the HNV farming concept at EU and local levels. Guy Beaufoy EFNCP Spain. What is High Nature Value (HNV) farming?. Farming that creates conditions of high biodiversity (diversity of wild fauna and flora); and/or maintains particular wildlife species of conservation concern.

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Defining the HNV farming concept at EU and local levels

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  1. Defining the HNV farming concept at EU and local levels Guy Beaufoy EFNCP Spain

  2. What is High Nature Value (HNV) farming? • Farming that creates conditions of high biodiversity (diversity of wild fauna and flora); • and/or maintains particular wildlife species of conservation concern.

  3. What is High Nature Value (HNV) farming? • The term “HNV farming” dates from 1993 -Nature Conservation and New Directions in the CAP • This report found the common characteristic of HNV farming to be a low intensityuse of: • Livestock densities per ha. • Nutrient inputs (nitrogen) • Biocides • Land exploitation with “space for nature”

  4. Identifying HNV farming at EU level • In 2003 the European Environment Agency began developing indicators and maps of HNV farming (Andersen et al). • Two main types were identified: • Low-intensity livestock systems using mainly semi-natural vegetation. • Low-intensity arable and tree cropping systems in a mosaic, with presence of semi-natural elements

  5. Low intensity management Livestock Nitrogen Biocides HNV Type 1 Type 2 % of semi-natural vegetation Grass, scrub Trees Field margins Diversity of land cover Crops Fallows Grass

  6. Presence of High Nature Value farmland using mainly semi-natural vegetation, CORINE land cover Source: EEA Western Isles, Scotland Extremadura, Spain

  7. Proportion of UAA under low-intensity farming systems, using FADN data on farm inputs Source: EEA, unpublished Extremadura

  8. Type 1: semi-natural grazing land (Extremadura)

  9. Natural values maintained by mountain grazing “Cambrionales” Hay meadows Black vulture Cytisus purgansformations Nardus grasslands

  10. Typcial mixed dryland landscape of Spanish interior (HNV type 2),

  11. Type 1: semi-natural grazing (Western Isles) Natura 2000 habitats: • Wet and dry heathland • Blanket bog • Alpine and coastal grasslands

  12. Type 2: low-intensity crop mosaics with semi-natural elements Crex crex

  13. Crucial actors for nature conservation

  14. How is HNV farming important for nature conservation? • Many of Europe’s most valued natural areas are maintained by HNV farming. • HNV farming is thus essential to the success of policies such as Natura 2000. • HNV farming is also crucial to biodiversity outside protected areas. • It is thus essential to achieving the EU’s aim of halting biodiversity decline by 2010.

  15. How secure is the future for HNV farming? • HNV farming is widespread in marginal areas where physical conditions have prevented intensification. • But it faces fundamental problems of economic survival due to various factors: • The marginal physical conditions and location. • Specific labour requirements (e.g. shepherding). • Competition from other labour opportunities. • Competing landuses, such as afforestation and irrigation (CAP funded?). • Increasing rules and regulations

  16. What needs to be done? • Need a common understanding of: • what is HNV farming? • how to identify it? • and how to target policies to support it? • New EU study starting now on these questions • But Member States need to take up the challenge for themselves. • Local case-studies should be helpful in building a national picture.

  17. Ensuring sustainability of HNV farms • For basic economic viability, farms need support payments (for example, Less Favoured Areas payments). • For long-termsustainability, farmsneed investment aid and advice. • Farming practices can be made better for the environment through agri-environment payments. • Policies for rural development, nature conservation, forestry, food labelling, should all take account of HNV farming.

  18. Conclusions • Supporting HNV farming is not just a legal obligation … • For some countries it can also be seen as an important resource for rural areas. • HNV farming is an opportunity for combining nature conservation with the maintenance of employment and cultural values... • And for the development of new economies, such as “green” tourism.

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