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16 - The environmental impact of EU green box subsidies

from PART IV - Green box subsidies and the environment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 May 2010

Ricardo Meléndez-Ortiz
Affiliation:
ICTSD, Geneva, Switzerland
Christophe Bellmann
Affiliation:
ICTSD, Geneva, Switzerland
Jonathan Hepburn
Affiliation:
ICTSD, Geneva, Switzerland
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Summary

Introduction

With over €372 billion to be spent over the 2007 to 2013 budget period on agricultural subsidies in the European Union (EU), these subsidies have become a key determinant of farmers' incomes, frequently accounting for over one-half of European farmers' annual earnings, and thus of land use decisions. The way in which these subsidies have been allocated has therefore shaped land use patterns across the EU and consequently had a resounding impact on wildlife and the environment in rural areas. At the same time, these subsidies have been accused of heavily distorting world trade to the detriment of farmers in developing countries and have become one of the principal stumbling blocks in the Doha Round of negotiations at the World Trade Organization (WTO).

The Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) underwent significant reform in 2003. This reform was driven by negotiations at the WTO and, to a lesser extent, by the environmental impacts of the CAP. It resulted in a shift of CAP spend from traditional market and product support measures to green-box-compliant schemes, namely, subsidies that are considered to be non-trade-distorting. It also saw the introduction of minimum environmental standards for all farmers in receipt of subsidies, known as cross-compliance, and the strengthening of environmental schemes.

These trends are likely to continue with the ongoing “health check” of the Common Agricultural Policy as well as the post-2013 EU budget review, which provides an opportunity for substantial reform.

Type
Chapter
Information
Agricultural Subsidies in the WTO Green Box
Ensuring Coherence with Sustainable Development Goals
, pp. 468 - 495
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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