Do a deal with the yanks, they’ll get the best of both worlds. Protein and carbs in the same animatable.
Chictatoes! Wash, mash, watch, scotch! Perfick.
Consistent-Good2487 on
it’s almost like farms are being bought to avoid tax lmao
Ibelieveinjoehendry9 on
The population increases and every year more farmland is loss to a range of activities when it needs to be protected, especially the high quality arable land.
MarcusBlueWolf on
I guess British farms losing subsides post Brexit hasn’t helped either?
xeere on
I blame farming subsidies. We give farmers a million and one benefits that makes farming the UK totally uncompetitive. New Zealand has some of the best agriculture in the world and they only got it after they stopped subsiding farmers and let free market competition actually take hold. And yes, that includes inheritance tax on farmers.
pajamakitten on
Yet we still do not have plan in place to improve this, especially in the face of overwhelming climate change threatening food supplies worldwide.
full_metal_codpiece on
Does that include pre-WW1 when we were importing 60% of our food supply?
ItsWormAllTheWayDown on
Have we considered not using so much of our arable land to just feed animals.
Some_Attention2653 on
Nothing to worry about. Keep importing 1 million people a year, paving over greenbelts and farms.
Who needs food security when the world is so stable and there’s no risk of shocks to the global food supply. Oh wait…
Ill_Refrigerator_593 on
This article is slightly misleading, it states-
>the amount of food we consume that is grown in this country — fell from a peak of 78 per cent back in 1984 to 62 per cent in 2023, the most recent year for which we have data.
In fact domestic food production levels have been stable for around 20 years now-
78% was indeed the peak, but that had risen from around to 30-35% in the 1930s’. Domestic food production is higher now than it has been through much of recent history.
Northern Europe and North East Asia has a pretty large comparative & absolute disadvantage in agriculture compared to say the US or Canada.
MinistryOfFarming on
Farmland is under attack at the moment because the cost of growing the countries food has never been higher but farmers can not pass this cost onto consumers because of government and supermarkets.
It’s no surprise farms are being sold in record numbers when the price people will pay for solar/housing and rewilding land is more attractive than keeping the land in hand and using it to produce food.
We were renting an 8 acre field for 28 years, the owner died last year and the new owner wants to sell it, arable land in my area used to sell for £12,000/acre, now after inflation and government inheritance tax rises it will be more like £16,000/acre minimum and could even sell for up to £30,000/acre.
This rise isn’t because of farmers having money to spend on buying more land, it is all investment companies and people who have made money in other industries in the city that are prepared to buy it at any cost!
Wilsonj1966 on
Not just farms too. Britain’s can literally grow their own food and I don’t understand why more us don’t
A couple of buckets of soil in your garden and you’ll have a years worth of potatoes
You can turn a couple of bulbs of garlic from the supermarket into a years supply
Few little effort, save money and its very rewarding to pull your own food out the ground
Marble-Boy on
Is it called “growing” chickens? Because I’ve never heard it said that way before.
It’s a serious question… pretend that I’m stupid.
_Originz__ on
We’re a tiny island how are we gonna grow enough food to meet the demand lol
My_balls_touch_water on
Bill Gates and BlackRock investment have been meeting with Keir Starmer and people should be worried about that.
Government owned farms who control the market and turn farmers into civil servants.
haribo_2016 on
I’m not sure that’s true! However, if you was to talk about scalability due to massive influx of people the UK has taken in the last decade. Then I’d suggest it’s not sustainable. However, many countries over the thousands of years have taken in refugees, settlers, or whatever terminology, years before a long fight. These places become their lands, become their worth, become themselves and their family. Our generations blood is spilled in the hope of a better future. Whether that be today or a hundred years from now. Don’t be cunts. People are people and want a better life wherever they are.
17 commenti
Mash ‘em together and you get Chictatoes.
Do a deal with the yanks, they’ll get the best of both worlds. Protein and carbs in the same animatable.
Chictatoes! Wash, mash, watch, scotch! Perfick.
it’s almost like farms are being bought to avoid tax lmao
The population increases and every year more farmland is loss to a range of activities when it needs to be protected, especially the high quality arable land.
I guess British farms losing subsides post Brexit hasn’t helped either?
I blame farming subsidies. We give farmers a million and one benefits that makes farming the UK totally uncompetitive. New Zealand has some of the best agriculture in the world and they only got it after they stopped subsiding farmers and let free market competition actually take hold. And yes, that includes inheritance tax on farmers.
Yet we still do not have plan in place to improve this, especially in the face of overwhelming climate change threatening food supplies worldwide.
Does that include pre-WW1 when we were importing 60% of our food supply?
Have we considered not using so much of our arable land to just feed animals.
Nothing to worry about. Keep importing 1 million people a year, paving over greenbelts and farms.
Who needs food security when the world is so stable and there’s no risk of shocks to the global food supply. Oh wait…
This article is slightly misleading, it states-
>the amount of food we consume that is grown in this country — fell from a peak of 78 per cent back in 1984 to 62 per cent in 2023, the most recent year for which we have data.
In fact domestic food production levels have been stable for around 20 years now-
[https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/standard/976/cpsprodpb/8963/production/_130717153_optimised-uk_food_supply-nc.png.webp](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/standard/976/cpsprodpb/8963/production/_130717153_optimised-uk_food_supply-nc.png.webp)
78% was indeed the peak, but that had risen from around to 30-35% in the 1930s’. Domestic food production is higher now than it has been through much of recent history.
[https://www.findmypast.co.uk/1939register/britain-food-1930s](https://www.findmypast.co.uk/1939register/britain-food-1930s)
Northern Europe and North East Asia has a pretty large comparative & absolute disadvantage in agriculture compared to say the US or Canada.
Farmland is under attack at the moment because the cost of growing the countries food has never been higher but farmers can not pass this cost onto consumers because of government and supermarkets.
It’s no surprise farms are being sold in record numbers when the price people will pay for solar/housing and rewilding land is more attractive than keeping the land in hand and using it to produce food.
We were renting an 8 acre field for 28 years, the owner died last year and the new owner wants to sell it, arable land in my area used to sell for £12,000/acre, now after inflation and government inheritance tax rises it will be more like £16,000/acre minimum and could even sell for up to £30,000/acre.
This rise isn’t because of farmers having money to spend on buying more land, it is all investment companies and people who have made money in other industries in the city that are prepared to buy it at any cost!
Not just farms too. Britain’s can literally grow their own food and I don’t understand why more us don’t
A couple of buckets of soil in your garden and you’ll have a years worth of potatoes
You can turn a couple of bulbs of garlic from the supermarket into a years supply
Few little effort, save money and its very rewarding to pull your own food out the ground
Is it called “growing” chickens? Because I’ve never heard it said that way before.
It’s a serious question… pretend that I’m stupid.
We’re a tiny island how are we gonna grow enough food to meet the demand lol
Bill Gates and BlackRock investment have been meeting with Keir Starmer and people should be worried about that.
Government owned farms who control the market and turn farmers into civil servants.
I’m not sure that’s true! However, if you was to talk about scalability due to massive influx of people the UK has taken in the last decade. Then I’d suggest it’s not sustainable. However, many countries over the thousands of years have taken in refugees, settlers, or whatever terminology, years before a long fight. These places become their lands, become their worth, become themselves and their family. Our generations blood is spilled in the hope of a better future. Whether that be today or a hundred years from now. Don’t be cunts. People are people and want a better life wherever they are.