Saturday, February 19, 2011

Support for super dairy.......


County farmer: Why I hope the rejected super-dairy plan doesn't go away...

County farmer: Why I hope the rejected super-dairy plan doesn't go away...
Stephen Riding, part owner of Bonsdale Farm in Blyton.
PLANS for a super-dairy in Nocton, near Lincoln, have been withdrawn, to the delight of campaigners. But dairy farmer Stephen Riding, from Blyton near Gainsborough, believes that this is bad news for the country’s dairy industry...

I have been a dairy farmer all my life and have been on this site in Blyton for 31 years with my brother.
We have 200 milking cows across 900 acres.
Stay one step ahead of the weather
I was disappointed when it was announced Nocton Dairies Ltd were to withdraw their plans. They really need to go ahead with it, in my opinion as a dairy farmer.
But it was encouraging that the withdrawal was solely down to the objections from the Environment Agency, as it means they could find another site and have another go with it.
The British dairy industry is shrinking and if we carry on the way we are, in another 20 years there won't be any dairy farmers left.
With the supermarkets acting the way they are, the days of the family dairy farm are dying. Someone needs to be prepared to take up the commitment of a big dairy unit.
The Nocton Dairy would have been able to produce milk ten per cent faster than any other dairy and it would have been a real shot in the arm for the industry.
The other thing is, the Nocton Dairy could have been a test to see if the system would work in the UK.
The technology is imported from America where it is mainly used in drier climates. We don't yet know if it will work over here in the UK and the Nocton Dairy could have been a test.
If successful, we could have developed it across the UK and sites like the Nocton Dairy would have become the norm.
When I first heard about the dairy plans my first thought was the groundwater – its Lincoln's drinking water we're talking about.
The Environment Agency should have spoken up and said something sooner if they were going to object, rather than leaving it until the eleventh hour.
The Nocton Dairy would have been the future of British dairy farming, so hopefully Nocton Dairies Ltd can find another location.


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Nocton Dairy plans Scrapped!


Plans for Lincolnshire 'super dairy' are withdrawn

Herd of dairy cowsThe company previously pulled plans for a dairy twice the size of the one being proposed

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Plans for the UK's largest dairy farm have been withdrawn, the farmers behind the scheme have announced.
Nocton Dairies Ltd wanted to build the farm, housing 3,770 cows, near Lincoln.
There had been widespread opposition to the plans with concerns raised about the environmental and animal welfare impacts of the proposed "super dairy".
The farmers said their "sole" reason for the decision to withdraw their application was the objection by the Environment Agency.
They said they had written to North Kesteven District Council to formally withdraw their application for planning permission to build the facility.
The council was due to consider the planning application in March.
The original plans for the UK's largest dairy farm were for 8,100 cows on a single site at Nocton Heath - provoking an angry response from opponents who labelled it "the equivalent of battery chicken farms for cows".
Pollution concerns
That planning application was withdrawn last year, but the two farmers, Peter Willes and David Barnes, resubmitted the Nocton Dairies scheme in November with less than half the number of cows.

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This is a victory for consumers, dairy farmers and, of course, the cows within it”
Suzi MorrisWorld Society for the Protection of Animals
In a statement, they said: "The fundamental concept we have been proposing is a sound one: expand dairying toward the east to re-integrate livestock and arable farming, make better use of resources, proactively manage welfare, gain economies of scale, and look to support a long-term reduction in water pollution.
"We challenge other farmers to pick up the baton and see where these concepts can take them."
The Environment Agency had lodged their objection to the plans amid concerns about the potential for pollution seeping through limestone into groundwater, from which drinking supplies are drawn.
An agency spokesperson said: "We have maintained our objection to the revised application for the proposed super dairy at Nocton because we consider the risk to groundwater to be unacceptable.
"We asked the developer to address the risks to groundwater, so important for public water supplies in this area, in their revised application.
"But, despite additional evidence being submitted, our original concerns about slurry management at this environmentally sensitive location remain."
Suzi Morris, UK director of the World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA), said: "While the Environment Agency's objections were the final nail in the coffin for the Nocton plans, our own research made it clear there was a huge range of reasons why Nocton should not be given the go-ahead.
"This is a victory for consumers, dairy farmers and, of course, the cows within it, and we can't forget the Lincolnshire community which has had a narrow escape."

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