Farming Recovery Fund will support farmers who suffered
uninsurable damage to their land due to flooding earlier this
year.
Eligible farmers can access grants of between £500 and £25,000 to
cover recultivation costs under the scheme.
Gloucestershire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire,
Somerset, Warwickshire, West Northamptonshire, Wiltshire and
Worcestershire all set to benefit.
The government has today (9
April) opened the Farming Recovery Fund to support farmers who
suffered uninsurable damage to their land due to flooding this
winter.
Under the scheme, eligible
farmers can access grants of between £500 and £25,000 to return
their land to the condition it was in before exceptional flooding
due to Storm Henk.
Eligible farmers are being
contacted directly by Rural Payments Agency (RPA) outlining the
support available to them through the Farming Recovery Fund and
how they can make a claim.
The fund forms part of a
broader scheme called the Flood Recovery Framework which is
activated in exceptional circumstances to support councils and
communities following severe
flooding.
The fund will initially be open
in those local authority areas where the Flood Recovery Framework
has already been activated to help farms which have experienced
the highest levels of flooding. These are Gloucestershire,
Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, Somerset,
Warwickshire, West Northamptonshire, Wiltshire and
Worcestershire.
Eligibility for the fund will
remain under review by Defra to ensure it is supporting areas
where farmland is most impacted. The further counties under
review are Berkshire, Herefordshire, Oxfordshire, Surrey,
Staffordshire, Yorkshire, Norfolk and
Derbyshire.
Farming Minster Mark
Spencer said:
“I know how difficult this
winter has been for farmers, with extreme weather such as Storm
Henk having a devastating impact on both cropping and grazing, as
well as damaging property and
equipment.
“The Farming Recovery Fund will
support farmers who suffered uninsurable damage with grants of up
to £25,000, and sits alongside broader support in our farming
schemes to improve flood
resilience.”
In January, the government
announced its intention to open the fund and have consulted with
stakeholders and developed an eligibility criteria. This analysis
has identified fields that are eligible. This means the RPA can
write to eligible farmers directly to invite them to claim and
will allow payments to be made more quickly once a claim has been
received.
Farmers are already eligible
for support through the Flood Recovery Framework,
including a grant of up to £2,500 as part of the Business
Recovery Grant.
The last year has seen
exceptionally heavy rainfall across the UK, with 2023 named by
the Met Office as the 6th wettest year since its records began in
1836.
Since 2015, the government has
protected over 900,000 acres of agricultural land from the
impacts of flooding and are investing £5.6 billion to better
protect hundreds of thousands of properties in communities,
including many in rural areas.