It includes reducing bureaucracy for farmers and reworking the controversial sustainable farming scheme
Wales’ new minister in charge of farming and the environment, Llyr Gruffydd, has spelt out his priorities in his first speech to the Senedd since being appointed by Rhun ap Iorwerth.
The minister for rural resilience and sustainability opened his speech saying he would start with explaining his plans for climate and nature. “I’d like to start with our commitment to take action on climate and nature, not only because of its environmental importance, which is clear to all, but also because of its central importance to the future prosperity, health and resilience of Wales in the future. Clean air, clean water, healthy soils and thriving ecosystems are not optional extras.
“They support public health, they protect communities and create the conditions for Wales to develop sustainably.”
There was plenty more we learnt too about his plans in government:
1. Net Zero by 2040
He told the Senedd that work has already started on an “ambitious climate and nature action plan”, focused on a practical pathway to net zero by 2040 and substantive nature recovery by 2050, “shaped by the realities people and communities are facing across Wales”.
The UK government has a target of reaching net zero by 2050 while the Welsh Labour government had a target for the public sector to reach Net Zero by 2030 and Wales generally by 2035 as part of the Co-operation Agreement with Labour. Rhun ap Iorwerth had admitted during the campaign that that timescale wasn’t realistic.
2. A new regulator for water
He said: “We’re also committed to driving forward water reform, including plans for a new Welsh economic water regulator with the powers needed to drive investment, to reduce pollution and to deliver long-term improvements.”
That was something in their manifesto too.
3. New flooding group
He said in the first 100 days of the government – which ends at the end of August – they will outline the terms of reference for a new flood resilience and preparedness forum.
“Flooding is already, as we know, affecting homes, businesses and communities as part of a wider pattern of climate pressures, from more intense rainfall and storms to drought, heat and pressures on water, land and infrastructure. We need a joined-up approach to preparedness and improved long-term resilience.
“This includes catchment-scale and nature-based solutions that reduce risk, that protect communities, support nature recovery and help Wales adapt to the climate impacts that we’re already experiencing,” he said.
4. Funding to restore coal tips
The minister said they will continue to argue Wales should get extra funding from the UK Government to restore coal tips in Wales, something the former Labour administration had argued too.
“We’ll also continue to press the UK Government on environmental justice for coalfield communities, including the funding needed to restore coal tips and contaminated land. Communities living with the legacy of Wales’s industrial past should not be left to carry that risk alone. We will take a long-term, co-ordinated approach to secure these sites, safeguard communities and, of course, unlock their future potential,” said Mr Gruffydd.
5. Changing the Sustainable Farming Scheme
This scheme, the source of so much worry to farmers and the cause of a huge Senedd protest in the last term, will, he said, be “refined”.
Mr Gruffydd said that 50% of farmers, over 8,000 businesses, have joined the universal layer of the scheme which was a “positive start” but that ” I will continue to listen and to work with the farming community to refine the scheme, so that more join next year and beyond”. For our free daily briefing on the biggest issues facing the nation, sign up to the Wales Matters newsletter here
He said he always wants to ensure “a multi-annual budget for the sustainable farming scheme” to give certainty.
6. New TB programme
Mr Gruffydd said: “Bovine TB, as we all know, remains one of the most significant and persistent challenges facing agriculture in Wales.
“We will refresh the TB eradication programme, building on strong foundations, but recognising that a step change is needed to meet our ambition of a TB-free Wales by 2041. Building on Wales’s already strong record on animal welfare, we will also bring forward a new animal health and welfare plan, including new regulations for animal welfare establishments.”
7. Reduced bureaucracy
Mr Gruffydd said that he has ordered a review by his Plaid Cymru colleague John Davies into excess bureaucracy which impacts the time farmers can spend on the farm. “I want to decrease the bureaucratic burden on family farms, making a real difference to the time that is spent on complicated and duplicated processes—time that could otherwise be spent managing stock, improving productivity or, of course, planning for the future.”
8. New food strategy
he said that he will be championing Welsh fisheries, strengthening the system that brings food to people across Wales via a new national food strategy for Wales, safeguarding food supply chains, improving food literacy, strengthening supply chains and supporting our food and drink industry to grow, building a reputation for high-quality, sustainably produced food.






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