Title, commencement, extent and application1.
(1)
These Regulations may be cited as the Uplands Transitional Payment Regulations 2011 and come into force on 17th February 2011.
(2)
These Regulations, except for regulation 9, apply only in England.
Interpretation2.
In these Regulations—
“breeding cow” means a suckler cow or a heifer;
“claim” means a claim for uplands transitional payment made in a single payment scheme application;
“claimed forage area” means land included as forage land in a single payment scheme application or related less favoured area allowance application;
“eligible forage area” means such part of the qualifying forage area that is severely disadvantaged land;
“the England LFA maps” means the four volumes of maps numbered 1 to 4, each volume being marked “Less Favoured Area Map of England 2009”, dated 29th January 2010, signed on behalf of the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and deposited at the offices of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs at Ergon House, Horseferry Road, London, SW1P 2AL;
“ewe” means a female sheep which was at least one year old on 1st January 2011, or had lambed by that date;
“holding” has the same meaning as in Article 2(b) of Council Regulation 73/2009;
“less favoured area” means any area of land shown coloured blue or pink on the England LFA maps;
“moorland” means all the land shown coloured brown in the three volumes of maps entitled “Moorland Map of England 2009”, each volume being marked with the number of the volume, dated 29th January 2010, signed on behalf of the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and deposited at the offices of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs at Ergon House, Horseferry Road, London, SW1P 2AL;
“qualifying forage area” means the claimed forage area or, where deductions are made under Schedule 2 (availability of individual quotas: deductions from claimed forage area), such part of that area as remains following those deductions;
“related less favoured area allowance” means a compensatory allowance payable in relation to land situated in Northern Ireland, Scotland or Wales in accordance with Article 36(a)(i) or (ii) of Council Regulation 1698/2005 or Chapter V of Title II of Council Regulation 1257/1999;
“relevant animal” means, in relation to a claimant, a breeding cow or ewe determined as a relevant animal in accordance with Schedule 1 (relevant animals);
“severely disadvantaged land” means any area of land shown coloured pink on the England LFA maps;
“single payment scheme” means the support scheme established under Title III of Council Regulation 73/2009;
“suckler cow” has the same meaning as in Article 109(d) of Council Regulation 73/2009;
“uplands transitional payment” means the compensatory allowance payable in accordance with these Regulations, Article 36(a)(ii) of Council Regulation 1698/2005 and Chapter V of Title II of Council Regulation 1257/1999.
Uplands transitional payment3.
(1)
The Secretary of State must pay an uplands transitional payment for 2011 to a claimant who is eligible under regulation 4.
(2)
The Secretary of State must only make such a payment in respect of eligible forage area that does not exceed 700 hectares.
Eligibility for uplands transitional payment4.
(1)
A claimant who satisfies the conditions in paragraph (2) is eligible for an uplands transitional payment.
(2)
The conditions are that—
(a)
the claim relates to at least—
(i)
ten hectares of severely disadvantaged land, or
(ii)
one hectare of severely disadvantaged land, where the claimant is eligible for a related less favoured area allowance in another part of the United Kingdom;
(b)
at least one relevant animal is on land that is—
(i)
less favoured area, and
(ii)
in the claimant’s holding;
(c)
the land referred to in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b)—
(i)
was available to be grazed or have a forage crop taken from it for a continuous period of seven months, starting on any date from 1st January 2010 to 31st March 2010 inclusive, and
(ii)
during that seven-month period, was available to the claimant to be grazed or have a forage crop taken from it for a period, or periods in total, of at least four months;
(d)
the claimant farms at least one parcel that is—
(i)
severely disadvantaged land, and
(ii)
subject to an ESA Agreement or a CSS Agreement that did not expire before 1st January 2011;
(e)
the claimant—
(i)
(ii)
after 10 June 2009 the claimant took over land and an ESA Agreement or a CSS Agreement relating to all or part of that land that did not expire before 1st January 2011; and
(f)
where all or part of the claim relates to common land, that common land is subject to an ESA Agreement or a CSS Agreement that did not expire before 1st January 2011.
(3)
But a claimant who is in breach of the agricultural undertaking is not eligible for an uplands transitional payment, unless the Secretary of State considers it reasonable in all the circumstances that the breach should not affect the claimant’s eligibility.
(4)
A claimant who ceases to farm does not breach the undertaking referred to in paragraph (3) provided that at least ten hectares of the land in respect of which the undertaking was given continue to be used for the purposes of agriculture.
(5)
Where a holding in respect of which a claim has been made is situated partly outside England, the area of land which must be used for the purposes of agriculture under paragraph (4) is reduced by a percentage equal to the percentage of the land which is outside England.
(6)
For the purposes of paragraph (2)(c), land is taken to be available to be used for grazing or to have a forage crop taken from it if it is not so available only as a result of an agri-environment agreement.
(7)
In this regulation—
(a)
(b)
“agriculture” includes horticulture, fruit growing, seed growing, dairy farming and livestock breeding and keeping, the use of land as grazing land, meadow land, osier land, market gardens and nursery grounds, and the use of land for woodlands where that use is ancillary to the use of land for other agricultural purposes;
(c)
“agri-environment agreement” means—
(i)
an agreement made as part of a scheme made under Article 39 of Council Regulation 1698/2005, or
(ii)
such other agreement involving environmental commitments as the Secretary of State thinks fit;
(d)
“parcel” means a continuous area of land, declared by one claimant, which does not cover more than one single crop group;
(e)
Payment5.
(1)
The Secretary of State must pay any uplands transitional payment at the rates specified in this regulation.
(2)
For the qualifying forage area of severely disadvantaged land which is moorland or common land, the payment rate per hectare is—
(a)
£14.78 for the first 350 hectares; and
(b)
£7.39 for the next 350 hectares.
(3)
For the qualifying forage area of severely disadvantaged land other than severely disadvantaged land which is moorland or common land, the rate payable per hectare is—
(a)
£39.02 for the first 350 hectares; and
(b)
£19.51 for the next 350 hectares.
Increase in amount of payment6.
(1)
The Secretary of State must increase the amount of any payment under regulation 5 by 5% if either condition A or condition B is met, and by 10% if both those conditions are met.
(2)
Condition A is that at least one hectare or 5% (whichever is the smaller) of the claimant’s severely disadvantaged land—
(a)
is planted with arable crops in respect of which the claimant is not receiving any other financial support, and
(b)
was not converted from permanent pasture in or after 2005.
(3)
Condition B is that at least one hectare or 5% (whichever is the smaller) of the claimant’s severely disadvantaged land—
(a)
is planted with woodland in respect of which the claimant is not receiving any other financial support, and
(b)
was not converted from permanent pasture in or after 2005.
(4)
In this regulation—
(a)
“other financial support” does not include financial support from the single payment scheme;
(b)
“permanent pasture” means non-rotational land used for sown or natural grass production for periods of five or more years.
Shortfalls and surpluses in the fund7.
(1)
The Secretary of State may increase the amount of any payment made under these Regulations by up to 10% if the fund available for uplands transitional payment is greater than anticipated because—
(a)
the amount of eligible forage area in respect of which such payments are payable is smaller than anticipated, or
(b)
the budget allocation for the Rural Development Programme for England 2007-2013, or that part of that budget available for uplands transitional payments, is or is likely to be greater than anticipated.
(2)
The Secretary of State may decrease the amount of any payment made under these Regulations by up to 10% if that fund is smaller than anticipated by the Secretary of State because—
(a)
the amount of eligible forage area in respect of which such payments are payable is greater than anticipated, or
(b)
the budget allocation for the Rural Development Programme for England 2007-2013, or that part of that budget available for uplands transitional payments, is or is likely to be smaller than anticipated.
(3)
Any increase applied under paragraph (1) or decrease applied under paragraph (2) must be applied in the same proportion to each claimant’s payment.
(4)
The “Rural Development Programme for England 2007-2013” is the Programme for England approved by the European Commission on 7th December 2007 under Article 18(4) of Council Regulation 1698/2005.
Deductions from claimed forage area8.
Schedule 2 (availability of individual quotas: deductions from claimed forage area) has effect.