HortWeek Podcast

George Eustice on the peat ban, import/export friction and his legacy


Listen Later

Former Defra secretary of state George Eustice says there should be a new generation of UK fresh produce glasshouse production post-election, with a Defra strategy to support that.


The retiring Conservative MP believes more can also be done on labour shortages. He supports a needs-based policy so sectors with shortages have sector-specific visas, and a 10-year plus seasonal worker scheme maintained at current worker levels.


After standing down ahead of the July 4 general election, Eustice formed the Penbroath environmental and agricultural consultancy. He discusses his political legacy from his nine-year stint as a Defra minister, including almost three as secretary of state until 2022; they include the Environment, Agriculture and Fishery Acts and the transition from EU subsidies to new schemes. He also reflects on working through a "turbulent time" with Brexit, Covid and Ukraine happening during his tenure.


On plant imports, he argues the UK has been "incredibly generous" to the EU on plant imports and that has not been reciprocated with UK exports to the EU. Importers may find BCPs frustrating, but they should be buying from British nurseries where they know the health status of plants he says. Eustice does admit he would have timed the implementation better (delayed due to Covid, the Ukraine war and having to re-recruit border staff). Despite "teething problems" he maintains BCPs are the most proportionate and risk-based approach to stopping plant pests and diseases entering the UK.


On peat, he expresses frustration that his successor at Defra ,Therese Coffey, brough forward peat ban plans without a legislative vehicle. The consequent "uncertainty" was a "terrible mistake". Eustice wanted to ban garden centre bagged sales but to delay commercial peat bans on growers until 2030, with veg module bans not implemented until 2035-40. He wants to see a return to that approach.


He discusses how the new Government, be it Tory or Labour, could bring elements of the peat ban into force including using secondary regulation to restrict sales under the Environment Act's 'protecting resources' section, though the current the Government did not think that would work. A ban on all retail sales would get round how to make sure imports grown in peat do not undercut the UK market.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

HortWeek PodcastBy HortWeek

  • 3.5
  • 3.5
  • 3.5
  • 3.5
  • 3.5

3.5

2 ratings


More shows like HortWeek Podcast

View all
Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 by BBC Radio 4

Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4

2,121 Listeners

The Infinite Monkey Cage by BBC Radio 4

The Infinite Monkey Cage

1,986 Listeners

Desert Island Discs by BBC Radio 4

Desert Island Discs

2,093 Listeners

Farming Today by BBC Radio 4

Farming Today

66 Listeners

Gardeners' Question Time by BBC Radio 4

Gardeners' Question Time

281 Listeners

Gardeners' Corner by BBC Radio Ulster

Gardeners' Corner

105 Listeners

The Life Scientific by BBC Radio 4

The Life Scientific

239 Listeners

Gardening with the RHS by Royal Horticultural Society

Gardening with the RHS

264 Listeners

Wild Tales | Nature Podcast by National Trust

Wild Tales | Nature Podcast

103 Listeners

Full Disclosure with James O'Brien by Global

Full Disclosure with James O'Brien

252 Listeners

The Organic Gardening Podcast by Garden Organic

The Organic Gardening Podcast

87 Listeners

BBC Gardeners’ World Magazine Podcast by Immediate Media

BBC Gardeners’ World Magazine Podcast

311 Listeners

grow, cook, eat, arrange with Sarah Raven & friends by Sarah Raven

grow, cook, eat, arrange with Sarah Raven & friends

206 Listeners

Off Air with Jane & Fi by The Times

Off Air with Jane & Fi

170 Listeners

Journey Through Time by Goalhanger

Journey Through Time

276 Listeners