Best farming regions outside Netherlands

  News
  Newsroom
  Archive
  Calendar
  News
  2011
  2010
  2009
  2008
  2007
  2006
  2005
  2004
  2003
  RSS
  Calendar
  Open days
  Courses
  Congresses and symposia
  PhD-graduations and speeches

9 Sep 2009
Unit: Wageningen UR

Dutch farmers face high land prices and environmental costs.
The liberalization of agricultural policy is causing Dutch agriculture to lose out to some neighbouring countries. The reason is high production costs in urban Holland. This is the view Tia Hermans of Alterra expresses in the next issue of Land use policy. She evaluated the strength of agriculture in 160 regions of the European Union, using criteria for profit, people and planet.

 

The Netherlands scores well on competitiveness (profit) and labour productivity (people), but when it comes to planet it does only averagely. Farmers face higher land prices and environmental costs than colleagues in sparsely populated areas with highly productive agribusinesses in Denmark and parts of Germany and France. Hermans expects that businesses in the northern Netherlands will stay competitive but farmers elsewhere in the country much less so. / Albert Sikkema 


The above article was written by the editorial staff of Resource, the bi-weekly newspaper for Wageningen University and Research Centre. For more information, contact the press and science information officer of Wageningen UR, e-mail: pers.communicatie@wur.nl or the editorial staff of Resource, e-mail: resource@wur.nl. See the archived articles at resource.wur.nl


Print newsitem