Schemes closed: 1,700 Dutch farmers want to stop their business

Published 2024년 12월 23일

Tridge summary

The Netherlands is taking voluntary measures to reduce nitrogen emissions through the introduction of termination schemes for farmers, with the Netherlands Enterprise Agency reviewing applications. So far, 920 applications for the Lbv-plus scheme for peak polluters have resulted in 638 grants, 123 withdrawals, and 44 rejections. The pig farming sector has the highest number of applications. The government is also working on a new buy-out scheme, allocated between 1 billion and 2.5 billion euros, for outdated companies and farmers who missed previous buy-out schemes, with an expected opening in 2026.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The voluntary termination schemes are intended to reduce nitrogen emissions. The Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO) will assess the applications in the coming period. An agreement will then be sent back to the farmer, who will have six months to sign it. It may therefore take another six months before it is finally known how many farmers are using the schemes. The Lbv schemes involve 1590 applications, of which 920 are for the Lbv-plus for peak polluters. Of these, 638 have already been granted, 123 applications have been withdrawn and 44 have been rejected. The Lbv scheme involves 571 grants, 78 rejections and 15 withdrawn applications. With 574 applications, the pig farming sector is the sector with the most applications for the Lbv schemes, followed by the dairy farming sector with 449, the poultry farming sector with 245, the calf farming sector with 212 and 110 holders of multiple animal species. New buy-out scheme At the request of the Lower House, Minister of Agriculture ...
Source: Nieuwe Oogst

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