2024 Beef Welfare Scheme to open in early August

Jul 18, 2024 | Farm Viability, Green Architecture

It has been announced by the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM) that the Irish suckler sector is to receive a new support scheme in early August. The 2024 Beef Welfare Scheme (BWS) will focus on practical measures to enhance animal health and husbandry on suckler farms and will have a budget of €20m. When coupled with the Suckler Carbon Efficiency Programme (SCEP), participants in the BWS will be eligible for €200 per cow/calf pair for the first 22 pairs.

As with previous national schemes, participants must be a suckler farmer with eligible suckler calves born to eligible suckler cows in the period from 1 July 2023 to 30 June 2024. There are two measures in this scheme aimed at improving on-farm efficiency:

1. a mandatory meal feeding action
2. an optional vaccination action

Farmers can select the second action where they wish to improve overall herd health on their holdings.

The 2024 Beef Welfare Scheme will support farmers in meal feeding suckler calves before and after weaning, and in vaccinating against clostridial diseases and calf pneumonia. While the meal feeding action is mandatory for scheme participants, farmers must indicate that they are selecting the optional vaccination action at application stage if they wish to be considered for payment under this action. Farmers can then decide during the implementation phase, where appropriate in consultation with their veterinary surgeon, which disease they wish to target depending on the health status of their herds.

Amid concerns that autumn born calves would be excluded from the scheme, Minister for Agriculture, Charlie McConalogue T.D. made an important clarification to assure affected farmers, “Even in the small number of cases where calves born last autumn have now been sold on as weanlings, farmers remain fully eligible for the scheme. They can apply for payment for both actions where both were completed before the weanlings were sold. In the cases where calves were not vaccinated, they will not qualify for the €15 but the farmer remains eligible for the meal feeding payment which makes up €35 of the €50 payment per animal. This follows the same pattern as previous schemes including last year’s Beef Welfare Scheme. Where the scheme does differ however is that I have made an adjustment so that there is no penalty applied to the meal feeding in the event of a farmer not applying for the second measure.

Further details about the Beef Welfare Scheme can be found here.

To learn more about other schemes available under the CAP Strategic Plan 2023-2027, click here.

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