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GAgreenalliance.bsky.social

Yesterday, Defra appointed economist Dan Corry to carry out an internal review of its regulation and regulators. Senior fellow Ruth Chambers says:

"Environmental regulation is a public good as it protects fragile habitats, stops polluters from damaging our natural environment, and ensures people have rights to explore wild spaces. Any review of Defra’s regulatory frameworks must recognise this. But it’s clear that Defra’s regulators need more resources and a confidence boost, after years of neglect and underfunding." - Ruth Chambers, senior fellow, Green Alliance
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DVdeanvipond.bsky.social

One week in at Defra, and it looks like I'll be in just many meetings that discuss poo, as when I worked at the NHS.

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DSsuegreaney.bsky.social

Anecdotally, I've heard that Defra landscape recovery schemes have land management plans (tree planting, rewetting river valleys etc) that don't consider the impact on the historic environment particularly well. And aren't informed by the information deriving from archaeological research either...

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ABaliceponderland.bsky.social

Reminds me when Defra refused to remove a cow that died down a really steep bit on a school friend’s family farm so it never got moved. Anyway, long story short, eventually he got a really good cow skull. Based on that I doubt they’d haul one up a rail embankment.

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WBsilverfoxyboy.bsky.social

I wonder if there’s some knowledge assumed in this post? I hope the services being talked about are the ones that cut across the 30+ arms length bodies that Defra works alongside. I tend to liken Defra and the ALBs to a federated organisation, with all the challenges that that brings.

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MKmilesking.bsky.social

Well this is very concerning. In a debate yesterday, Labour Defra Secretary Steve Reed stated that farming and food security were "the foundations of our economy, our communities and indeed our environment.” Reed's reading straight off the NFU hymnsheet. www.farminguk.com/news/pressur...

Pressure mounts for bigger agri budget as MPs debate farming
Pressure mounts for bigger agri budget as MPs debate farming

Calls have been made for the government to boost the agriculture budget to £5.6 billion as MPs debated the state of the farming industry in the Commons.

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FJjuneussell.bsky.social

1. There has been an application to use the pesticides. 2. A spokesperson for Defra has responded: “This government has been clear that we will change existing policies to ban the use of neonicotinoid pesticides that threaten bees and other vital pollinators” This is all in the article.

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