House of Commons 22 July 2010
Written Ministerial
Statements (Environment, Food & Rural Affairs)
The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and
Rural Affairs (Mrs Caroline Spelman): This Government are committed to
sustainable development and to becoming the greenest Government ever, promoting
economic development, environmental protection and an improving quality of life
for everyone in the UK.
In support of this, DEFRA'S new Structural Reform
Plan was published last week. It sets out three departmental strategic
priorities:
to support
and develop British farming and encourage sustainable food production;
to help to
enhance the environment and biodiversity to improve quality of life; and,
to support
a strong and sustainable green economy, which is resilient to climate change.
To deliver these priorities, sustainability needs to
be driven across Whitehall and beyond.
I am committed to increasing the transparency and
accountability of DEFRA'S public bodies, to playing my part in reducing public
spending and to reducing the burden of regulation. Following my written
ministerial statement of 29 June 2010, Official Report, column 36WS, I
am today announcing the next series of reforms to DEFRA'S network of arm's
length bodies.
On sustainability-together with my right hon. Friend
the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change-we are determined to play
the lead role across the whole of Government. We will mainstream
sustainability, strengthen the Government's performance in this area and put
processes in place to join up activity across Government much more effectively.
I am not willing simply to delegate this responsibility to an external body. I
have accordingly decided that I will withdraw DEFRA
funding from the Sustainable Development Commission (SDC) at the end of the
current financial year, and instead take a personal lead, with an
enhanced departmental capability and presence.
I also fully support the role of the House of Commons
Environmental Audit Committee in this area: powerful scrutiny within the
democratic process.
The SDC was founded in October 2000 and recently
became an executive non-departmental public body (NDPB). It is jointly owned
with the devolved Administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Each
of them has to decide on the best future arrangements to meet their needs and
over the next few months my Department will work very closely with them to
ensure a smooth transition.
The SDC has made a positive contribution to
sustainable development across Government and society over the past 10 years,
and I pay tribute to their work and to their current and previous chairs, Will
Day and Jonathon Porritt.
I am also announcing today that I intend to abolish the Royal Commission on Environmental
Pollution in 2011, subject to the necessary processes and ongoing
discussions with devolved Administration Ministers. When the RCEP was set up in
1970, there was very little awareness of environmental issues, with few
organisations capable of offering relevant advice. The situation now is very
different, and the Government have many such sources of expert, independent
advice and challenge. Protecting the environment remains a key Government aim,
and DEFRA intends to draw on the full range of expertise available, including
Foresight, the research councils, the Living With Environmental Change
programme (in which DEFRA and DECC are partners with the research councils) the
Royal Society and other academies. In making this decision, I pay tribute to
the work of the Royal Commission and its current chair, Sir John Lawton. Over
the last 40 years the commissioners have made a significant contribution to
raising the profile of environmental issues in the UK.
A
range of public bodies affiliated to DEFRA was established by the 1948
Agricultural Wages Act. Over time, this piece of legislation has become
outdated, inflexible and burdensome for farmers and workers. So today I am announcing
that we will be seeking agreement with the Welsh Assembly Government to abolish
the Agricultural Wages Board. In England, we will be taking measures to bring
agricultural workers within the scope of the National Minimum Wage Act and my
Department will be working closely with BIS to make the necessary amendments to
the Act itself. We are discussing with the Welsh Assembly Government the
arrangements they wish to propose in respect of Wales, and will agree with them
measures for the abolition of the Committee on Agricultural Valuation and,
separately, the Commons Commissioners. The 15
Agricultural Wages Committees and the 16 Agricultural Dwelling House Advisory
Committees will also be abolished. Appropriate measures for
effecting these changes will be brought forward as part of the Public Bodies
(Reform) Bill. The cumulative effect of these changes will allow the
agricultural industry to adopt flexible and modern employment practices in
order to help ensure a vibrant and sustainable industry for the future.
I have decided that DEFRA should have a stronger role
in developing policy for inland waterways and have already signalled our
preference for moving British Waterways to a civil society model. Today I am
announcing that I also intend to abolish the Inland
Waterways Advisory Council. DEFRA will lead on developing future
policy in this area by consulting all interests directly, by making full use of
the evidence which can be provided by the navigation authorities and by forming
a closer relationship with stakeholders. This decision highlights the
importance I attach to the effective management of inland waterways and my
determination to place them on a more sustainable long-term footing.
The changes I am announcing today will help
streamline and modernise DEFRA'S network of arm's length bodies and enhance
accountability and transparency. I am continuing to look closely at DEFRA'S
other arm's length bodies and will make further announcements at the
appropriate time.