Italy: New CAP, maize on maize and wheat on wheat are banned from 2024 because they belong to the same genus

Published 2022년 10월 7일

Tridge summary

The article outlines the significant changes to come in the new Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), effective from January 1, 2023, with specific changes taking effect on January 1, 2024. These changes include the end of the single-succession ban and the prohibition of monoculture, meaning farmers can no longer grow the same crop on the same parcel multiple times due to increased concerns about depleting cereal and oil crop supplies. However, certain exceptions, such as wheat-barley rotation, will be permitted due to the crops belonging to different genera. Furthermore, livestock farms that alternate between ryegrass and silage or grain maize will also comply with the new regulations. The article also mentions that compliance with these new rules will be assessed for the first time in 2025, focusing on the 2024 farming campaign.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

These days, farmers are deciding what to sow for the 2022/2023 campaign, but in doing so we must take into account what will happen starting from January 1, 2024. The new CAP starts on January 1, 2023 with some exceptions, including the cancellation of the single-succession ban on the same parcel to grant some freedom, since we are increasingly short of cereals and oil crops. But from 1 January 2024 it will no longer be possible, on the same parcel, to apply monosuccession, such as corn on corn or durum wheat (and soft) on durum wheat, because they belong to the same genus. The same goes for vetch, field bean and broad bean, which are all three of the Vicia genus. Wheat-barley and ryegrass-corn allowed On the other hand, wheat-barley rotation will be possible, because they belong to different genera and therefore allow to obey the change of crop. For livestock farms that sow ryegrass in November and silage or grain maize in spring, there are no problems because the ...

Would you like more in-depth insights?

Gain access to detailed market analysis tailored to your business needs.
By clicking “Accept Cookies,” I agree to provide cookies for statistical and personalized preference purposes. To learn more about our cookies, please read our Privacy Policy.