HC Deb 15 November 1989 vol 160 cc334-5W
Dr. David Clark

To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will list for each of the last 10 years, the amount of European Community money which has been used to upgrade abattoirs; how many abattoirs have received this aid; and if he will make a statement.

Mr. Curry

[pursuant to the reply, 24 October 1989, c. 442.]: The information is as follows:

EC regulation 355/77
Awards and payments concerning red meat abattoirs in the United Kingdom: 1978–88
Awards made by commission of which those remaining eligible to claim grant for which actual payments made
Year Number of projects (a) amounts £ Number of projects (b) amounts £ (c) £
1978 9 1,262,943 7 687,462
1979 7 1,152,203 6 1,138,650 49,178
1980 14 2,791,853 10 1,790,723 511,925
1981 9 1,721,223 8 1,687,898 710,710
1982 1,063,988 3 1,028,345 1,407,203
1983 2 175,350 1 142,551 885,819
1984 2 392,146 2 392,146 717,845
1985 1,107,935
1986 2 679,232 2 679,232 710,065
1987 1 22,897 1 22,897 94,127
1988 1 750,000 1 750,000 558,187
Total 51 £10,011,835 41 £8,319,904 £6,752,994

Data are provided back to 1978, which was the first year of the awards under regulation EEC 355/77 (the regulation which provides for grants to help improve the marketing and processing structures of primary agricultural products).

The first column of the table shows all awards announced by the Commission to those projects in the red meat sector in the United Kingdom which wholly or partly include slaughtering. Ten of these awards were subsequently renounced by the applicants or cancelled by the Commission, either because the projects did not start, or were not in the event undertaken in accordance with the conditions laid down. The awards for projects which remained eligible to claim grant are set out in the second column.

The final column sets out the payments made by the end of 1988. Because there can be a time lag of up to four years from the date of the announcement of an award to the final payment (most beneficiaries would also claim an interim payment) there can rarely be an obvious year-by-year relationship between the amounts in the second and third columns. In addition some final claims are for sums which may be considerably less than the original award—for example, where actual costs turned out to be less than earlier forecasts.

No awards have been made to the red-meat sector in England since 1983, when the first investment programme under the scheme for this sector expired and was not renewed due to lack of foreseeable funding from the Commission. The red-meat sector has remained eligible for awards in the rest of the United Kingdom throughout the whole period.