€1.5m crop crisis fund agreed after farmers were hit by harsh weather
A €1.5m crop crisis fund has opened after lengthy negotiations with tillage farmers left devastated by last year's severe crop losses.
Cereal farmers had staged a six-day sit-in at the Department of Agriculture offices over the initial upper limits of €5,000 proposed for the fund.
Agriculture Minister Michael Creed said cereal farmers had experienced severe losses following the wet harvest conditions last September.
He pointed out there was always a "will to support these farmers", but the challenge was to find a way that ensured support was focused and targeted at those most impacted.
Farmers will get a contribution from the crop loss support measure towards the cost of spring cereal crop losses in excess of 30pc based on yields.
A payment rate will apply of €200 a hectare up to 35ha to deliver up to €7,000. However, a further €100/ha will be available where farmers lost half their crops, which brings the full payment up to €10,500.
To prove the losses farmers will have to provide evidence of sales from 2013 to 2016 to highlight the drop-off in income before August 25.
The Irish Farmers' Association (IFA) had estimated that more than 250 farmers had experienced grain losses of €3m, with straw pushing this up to almost €4m.

