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Old 31-01-24, 05:51   #1
 
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Thumbs Up HUGE Convoy of British Farmers Tractors Caused Gridlock in London

Protesting Farmers Have Frances' Government in a Bind. Frances' New Prime Minister Gabriel Attal Vows to Defend Farmers and Restore Authority

German, Italian and Spanish Farmers Plan Protests in February


Farmers have captured Frances' attention by showering government offices with manure and besieging Paris with traffic-snarling barricades of tractors and hay bales.


MailOnline 31 JAN 2024








Farmers relax by a bonfire as they block a highway Tuesday, Jan. 30, 2024 in Jossigny, east of Paris. With protesting farmers camped out at barricades around Paris



























French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal

Frances' government hoped to calm their anger with more concessions Tuesday to their complaints that growing and rearing food has become too difficult and not sufficiently lucrative.


The farmers say their protests aren't a moment too soon. Grievances have long been brewing in the European Union's leading agricultural power.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine has caused painful economic shocks, including higher costs, bringing farmers' anger to a head in France and other European countries. Climate change and pressure for more sustainable and more productive agriculture are also squeezing the 500,000 or so French farmers, who already have to compete against counterparts from far afield.

Protesters say it's becoming harder than ever to make a decent living from their fields, greenhouses and herds. For the worst off, it's impossible.

French farmers were already struggling to compete in the increasingly globalized economy.

To cite just two examples, chicken imports have surged and imports of cherry tomatoes from Morocco have exploded from 300 tons to 70,000 tons per year since 1995, according to a Senate study in 2022 about the dwindling competitive strength of French farms.

"Everything we warned of 30 years ago is coming true," said Damien Brunelle, a farmer of cereals and other crops in the Aisne region northeast of Paris. "Our countryside is emptying."

"Everything we buy has gone up," Bruelle said. "But we're not getting the same revenue."

When the Ukraine war pushed up prices, Brunelle got 400 euros (US$430 at current rates) per ton for the wheat he grows, he says. A ton now brings him less than half that: 190 euros.

Another common grievance from protesters is that they're being suffocated by red tape and tied down by French and EU rules that govern farming, land use and the distribution of billions of euros (dollars) in agricultural subsidies. Farmers complain that they're losing to rivals from countries with fewer constraints and lower costs.

On the barricades, Ukraine in particular is on some protesters' lips. Fast-tracked for EU membership talks, it's seen as a potentially fearsome rival with its vast fields of grain and other agricultural products that have flooded into Europe since the invasion.

"We're worried because they don´t have the same regulations as us," said Stéphanie Flament, a farmer of cereals and beets east of Paris. "It will be cheaper for the consumer, so where will consumers or companies turn to process flour and so on? To products that cost less."

In terms of numbers, the movement has attracted fewer protesters than the yellow vest demonstrations against economic injustice that gripped France in 2018-2019 and lastingly dented the popularity of President Emmanuel Macron.

Nor are these protests as disruptive or widespread as violent unrest that swept the country last year after the fatal police shooting of a teenager with North African roots, Nahel Merzouk.

But by using their lumbering agricultural vehicles to slow and block traffic and deposit stinky piles of agricultural waste outside government buildings, protesters have made themselves impossible to ignore and hard for police to stop.

The movement had a low-key start, with protesters turning roads signs upside-down to denounce what they argue are nonsensical agricultural policies. When that failed to get much attention, they brought out the big guns, their tractors.


This week, the farmers encircled Paris with barricades on major highways leading to the capital, ratcheting up pressure on Prime Minister Gabriel Attal.

"We are obliged to make a show of strength and have clashes to be heard," Brunelle said.



Under orders to tread lightly, police have largely looked the other way when protesters vented their anger with scattered acts of destruction. Officers have even provided motorcycle escorts to some tractor convoys.

The soft approach suggests the government hopes the movement might blow itself out given time and more concessions, on top of pro-agriculture measures the government announced last week. But protesters quickly declared them insufficient.

The stakes are high: Paris will host the Olympic Games in six months. Protests could spoil the party if they spread from farms to other sectors of the economy with workers squeezed by inflation and other difficulties.

But French farmers also aren't a cohesive group. They have disagreements about the future direction they believe their industry should take, and the help they say it needs.

The National Federation of Organic Agriculture, for example, takes a dim view of protesters' demands that they should have a freer hand in the use of pesticides, and hasn't joined the movement.

Its president, Philippe Camburet, said the protests are being exploited by prosperous farmers, who are faring well but playing up hardships faced by some farmers to extract concessions.

Farmers also have animals to feed and fields to tend to and it could be tough for them to continue manning barricades for the long haul.

If the FNSEA, the dominant agricultural union, decides that it has squeezed enough measures from the government and declares victory, protests could peter out.

"If the FNSEA stops," said Brunelle, "it's going to be very complicated for the movement to continue."







Energy costs surged with the Feb. 2022 launch by Russia of full-scale war in Ukraine and hit hard for farmers reliant on tractors, harvesters and other fuel-guzzling equipment.





Prices also soared for other inputs that underpin intensive farming, notably fertilizers.




Protesting Farmers Besiege Paris









MAGNIFIQUE...






If they win = LOWER PRICES FOR FRUIT AND VEG, NOT ONLY FOR THE FRENCH, BUT ALSO FOR US ACROSS THE CHANNEL......
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Old 26-03-24, 22:44   #2
 
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Movies Re: HUGE Convoy of British Farmers Tractors Caused Gridlock in London

Slow-Moving Tractor Convoy of Farmers Descends on Central London During Rush Hour:

More than 100 furious farmers caused gridlock in capital as they assemble in Westminster for angry protest over government support


MailOnline 27 MAR 2024


































Farmers are taking part in a tractor 'go-slow' in central London to raise awareness of the difficulties for the British farming industry

A huge army of tractors have descended on London during evening rush hour to protest against 'substandard imports and dishonest labelling' that farms warn are threatening food security.



The campaign groups Save British Farming and Fairness for Farmers of Kent have assembled for a 'go-slow' convoy and drive around Westminster which started at 6pm - with organisers expecting as many as 100 tractors as well as other farm vehicles.

As the tractors reached Westminster this evening, police had to push back the crowds spilling onto the road to show their support, holding banners and cheering.

Liz Webster, one of the organisers of the protest, said farmers were 'making history' today, adding: 'This is the beginning of something that is building and we are not going to stop until we get what we need.'

Convoys of tractors have been seen across London waving Union flags and holding signs reading 'no farmers, no food, no future'. Fortunately for their drivers, specialist agricultural vehicles are exempt from Sadiq Khan's £12.50 ULEZ charge.

Protesters - who gathered in New Covent Garden Market in Nine Elms - are raising concerns over the increasing difficulties faced by the British farming industry that they say are leaving the nation's food security at risk.





They are calling for an end to trade deals which they say are allowing imports of food produced to standards that would be illegal in the UK and undercutting British farmers.










Tractors blocked major roads in Europe as farmer protests continue



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