Farming News - No-deal Brexit cattle cull 'scare tactics' - Ulster Farmers' Union

No-deal Brexit cattle cull 'scare tactics' - Ulster Farmers' Union

The Ulster Farmers' Union (UFU) has rejected claims that 45,000 dairy cows will be culled in Northern Ireland as part of a no-deal Brexit.

BBC Newsnight reported that senior industry figures believe cows could be culled in the event of a no-deal Brexit, if new higher tariffs are applied to British milk.

UFU president Ivor Ferguson (pictured courtesy Ulster Farmers Union) said it was "scare tactics".

"We certainly don't anticipate culling dairy cows," he told the BBC.

He told BBC Radio Ulster's Stephen Nolan Show that the figure of 45,000 cows appeared to have been "plucked out of the air".

"I don't agree with it and nobody in the Ulster Farmers' Union would agree with it," he said.

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About 800 million litres of milk are processed in the Republic of Ireland from Northern Ireland each year.

According to BBC Newsnight, the fear among producers in Northern Ireland is that, if no agreement is reached and traditional trading relationships with the south become difficult, the country will be left with a glut of milk that it will not be able to process or sell.

Mr Ferguson said the UFU has been in contact with politicians, both locally and in Westminster, "to make our case that a no-deal Brexit would be disastrous for farmers".

"Farmers' reserves are at their lowest now because farming hasn't been profitable this year in a lot of the sectors," he said.

"If milk had to face a tariff, the only way that milk would go across the border would be if the government stepped up and paid a tariff, and that's assuming the Republic of Ireland would accept the milk.

"We are asking for advice on how to handle this."

The Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs has been contacted for comment.