Support for the agtech industry is among the key requirements for Ireland to meet water quality targets and retain its nitrates derogation.
As part of AgTech Ireland’s Pre-Budget 2025 Submission, chairperson Padraig Hennessy said delivering a renewal of the nitrates derogation was rightly a high priority for farmers, industry and government alike.
For farmers to deliver on the required water quality improvements, as well as their climate obligations and biodiversity restoration will require financial and fiscal supports, including for the agtech industry providing some of the solutions,” Hennessy said.
“When framing the Budget for 2025, it is important for our government to remember rural Ireland is critical to the economic and public life of the country, as well as its environment.
“The last couple of years have seen fundamental changes to the nitrates legislation, concerns over the continuation of the Irish nitrates derogation, new obligations on carbon emissions under the Climate Action Act and plans, topped by challenging weather conditions, and this has proven both costly and wearing for farmers’ livelihoods and mental health,” he added.
Hennessy explained that the need to transition to more sustainable farming practices, such as adopting the many tools which the agtech industry is developing, has never been greater.
“It is crucial that farmers would receive continued and strengthened financial and technical supports through CAP [Common Agricultural Policy] and national funds to promote transition to better practices and technology adoption,” Hennessy continued.
“It is equally important that agtech businesses are supported to thrive and develop, as their role is to accompany this transition.
“Agtech companies need favourable planning measures and taxation, access to high quality power and telecommunication infrastructure, patient finance, independent scientific validation of technology and local and national agency supports – such as LEO [local Enterprise Office], EI [Enterprise Ireland] and ISIF [Irish Strategic Investment Fund].”
AgTech Ireland has stressed that the forthcoming Budget must be used to fund infrastructure and measures supporting the agricultural and agtech ecosystems to enable Ireland to achieve its climate and environmental obligations.
The organisation is urging government parties, as well as opposition politicians, to engage with the issues it has outlined in the pre-Budget submission.