EU Affairs
Press release – First vote on simplification of EU agriculture laws
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In the draft resolution adopted by the Agriculture and Rural Development Committee (AGRI) by 38 votes to 8 and with 2 abstentions, MEPs call for further flexibility and support for farmers in complying with common agricultural policy (CAP) rules.
Environmental requirements
MEPs backed a series of changes to introduce more flexibility into how farms can abide by the CAP’s environmental rules.
More specifically, they agreed that not only farms that are certified as entirely organic, but also farms where only some parts are certified as organic and farms situated in special conservation areas, should be automatically considered as meeting some of the requirements to maintain land in good agricultural and environmental condition (GAEC).
To protect the environment and biodiversity, MEPs want to prolong even further the time it takes for grassland to be considered permanent. This is partly to discourage farmers from ploughing it, for arable use, just before the end of the period. The proposal is to expand the definition of permanent grassland to include land that has not been included in the crop rotation and has not been ploughed, tilled or reseeded for at least seven years, or land that was not classified as arable as of 1 January 2023.
Crisis payments
The AGRI Committee is against the proposed new type of direct payment for farmers who have been affected by natural disasters. However, the MEPs agree with the new crisis payment under rural development funds proposed by the Commission, and add animal disease outbreaks to the list of events whose impact on farmers could justify such aid.
The adopted text also proposes to lower the threshold of average annual production or income in losses, from at least 20%, proposed by the Commission, to at least 15%, so that more farmers are eligible for national financial contributions to premiums for insurance schemes or to mutual funds.
Small farmers and changes to strategic plans
MEPs propose to increase maximum limits for the support of small farmers: an annual payment to up to €5,000 (rather than the proposed €2,500) and a new one-off payment for business development up to €75,000.
MEPs also want to shorten the time the Commission would have to approve member states’ requests to make strategic amendments to national strategic plans, from three to two months.
Quote
Rapporteur André Rodrigues (S&D, PT) said: “This report is an important step that farmers across Europe have long been waiting for. By cutting red tape and making the CAP rules clearer and more workable, we are delivering solutions that allow farmers to do what they do best – produce – and that can support the sector in these turbulent times. This will help farmers and, in turn, hopefully also enable consumers to continue to access quality, safe and more affordable products.”
Next steps
The report adopted by AGRI is expected to be put to a vote during the 6 – 9 October plenary session. Talks with member states are set to start immediately afterwards, to potentially enable the final adoption of the new rules during a November plenary session.
Background
The Commission presented a simplification package of the current CAP on 14 May 2025. This flowed from recommendations from the strategic dialogue on the future of agriculture, which called for simplification to alleviate excessive administrative reporting and regulatory burdens on farmers and other agri-food actors.
The AGRI Committee used a simplified procedure where MEPs tabled amendments directly to the Commission proposal.
EU Affairs
UK energy chief eyes an oil and gas loophole
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That involves a parallel process, where the NSTA assesses a project’s development plan while OPRED judges its environmental statement.
The NSTA can’t sign off the development plan or grant drilling consent, though, until OPRED has completed its assessment. During the OPRED process, the environmental statement has to be signed off by DESNZ, effectively giving Miliband a mechanism to overrule the regulator’s recommendations.
That would give Miliband “in theory … lots of discretion to override regulator decision-making,” said Martin Copeland, chief financial officer at Serica Energy, one of the country’s largest oil and gas companies.
Paul de Leeuw, an energy expert at Aberdeen’s Robert Gordon University, called the guidance “pragmatic” and “timely,” adding it provides “the secretary of state with the powers to make a balanced and informed decision, reflecting a wide range of considerations.”
A second senior oil and gas industry figure — who has held talks with all major parties including the government and was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive lobbying — said they sensed “a split in government along the lines of environment and economic growth.”
There are fresh political pressures on Miliband just as these new powers take effect, the same person said.
“I think there has been winds of change blowing through Westminster in recent months. I think that’s due to a number of reasons. Obviously, the ‘Trump effect’ [backing aggressive fossil fuel drilling in the U.S.] is having a significant impact and it’s galvanizing the right. It’s galvanizing Reform and it’s galvanizing the Tories.”
EU Affairs
UK looks to lure talent caught by Trump’s visa bombshell
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Luke Sullivan, a former political secretary to Starmer, now a director at consultancy Headland, said Reform’s indefinite leave to remain announcement demonstrated the “complex” policy area is “fraught with political and economic trade-offs.”
The top talent Reeves is hoping to attract is listening.
Even without being implemented, Reform’s proposals would “have a negative impact on the attractiveness of the U.K. as a destination for the world’s brightest and best researchers because people may worry their right to be in the country could be taken away,” Alicia Greated, executive director of the Campaign for Science and Engineering, said.
“Retrospective changes of this sort would be extremely damaging to U.K. R&D and the wider economy, as well as individuals and their families,” she added.
Eamonn Ives, research director at The Entrepreneurs’ Network, a London-based think tank that advises on entrepreneur-friendly policies, agreed that international talent needs certainty.
“Instead of jeopardizing the residency status of immigrants already here, we should be doing all we can to welcome the world’s brightest and best,” he said.
“That means having pathways in place to enable international talent to come here, and then giving them the certainty they need to settle down and start building lucrative companies,” he added.
EU Affairs
Moldova braces for Kremlin meddling as US support wanes
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The EU is also extending its regular work to counter disinformation in EU countries to Moldova. In July, the Commission announced a new hub for fighting misinformation in Ukraine and Moldova. These hubs are part of the European Digital Media Observatory, bringing together experts in different regions to fight foreign interference. Six of these hubs will receive €8.8 million for a maximum of three years.
The EU executive also conducted a stress test with Google, Meta and TikTok, where they simulated responses to hybrid threats in preparation for the election.
Vițu, chair of the Audiovisual Council, said that much of the EU’s support has gone into Moldova’s StratCom center, providing expertise in mapping disinformation campaigns and hybrid attacks. Moldova has also been working to bring its laws in line with EU rules on content moderation, she said.
While Vițu praised these initiatives as the “best way” to fight Russian influence, she acknowledged doubts over their effectiveness in fully mitigating threats. Ultimately, the country is at “the mercy of the very big platforms,” she said.
Concerns have even reached Capitol Hill, where not all members are happy that the U.S. is largely sitting out the upcoming election.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee ranking member Jeanne Shaheen, a Democrat, and Thom Tillis, a Republican, sent letters to Meta and Alphabet earlier this month urging the platforms to prevent the spread of propaganda during the Moldovan election.
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