Many farmers and other actors in the food chain are willing to invest to modernise and improve the competitiveness, circularity, and sustainability of their farms or plants. However, this momentum to move forward is considerably slowed down or even stopped due to over restrictive and burdensome EU legislations such as the Water Framework Directive, the Birds and Habitat Directives or the Nitrates Directives. Considering that the Commission has explicitly put “simplifying for sustainable competitiveness” at the centre of its political agenda for 2024 2029 and has announced “stress‑tests” of several environmental legislations for 2026, it is timely to assess with people on the ground what are the changes required to ensure a more competitive and sustainable sector.
Bringing together policymakers, legal experts and farmers, we will look into the legislative barriers limiting legal certainty, financing and planning to ensure that “simplification” does not remain a purely rhetorical exercise but genuinely reduces administrative burden and enables sustainable farming and rural investments.
Programme
📅 24 JUNE | 🕑 14:00–17:00 | 📍 Brussels, Committee of the Regions Room VMA21
I. Welcoming Speech
II. Setting the scene
Exchange with MEPs (15 minutes)
III. Examples of barriers and permits refusal in different sectors and countries
Exchange with MEPs (15 minutes)
IV. Coffee break (20 minutes)
V. Barriers to innovation and the use of new technologies
Exchange with MEPs (15 minutes)
VI. Closing & Q&A
Many farmers and other actors in the food chain are willing to invest to modernise and improve the competitiveness, circularity,
The EU’s evolving policy agenda on sustainability and circularity, including the EU Bioeconomy Strategy and the upcoming Circular Economy Act,
Our co-chair MEP Benoit Cassart opened the Intergroup meeting in Strasbourg by welcoming participants in the room and online, stressing