Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




FARM NEWS
Farmers' blockade of Paris ends after fireman killed
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Nov 21, 2013


Farmers block the road with tractors in Trappes, near Paris, on November 21, 2013 during an "operation escargot" (Operation Snail). Photo courtesy AFP.

Irate French farmers ended a Paris road blockade that left one dead on Thursday with the promise of a ministerial meeting over a disputed subsidy, but with no guarantee of a change in policy.

Agriculture Minister Stephane Le Foll announced "high-level" talks with grain farmers, who have called for his resignation after grants previously earmarked for them were given to livestock farmers instead.

Many of the protesters held up placards calling for Le Foll's resignation while others read: "We are being mowed down like wheat."

The minister had insisted earlier there was "no question" of going back on the reallocation of subsidies.

Transport Minister Frederic Cuvillier had called for the "immediate lifting" of the blockade which was blamed for a crash that killed a car driver, and organisers of the protests followed suit, ordering farmers to free up the roads.

The victim was a fireman who was on his way to work before dawn and crashed his car into a truck forming part of a barricade.

Six people suffered minor injuries in a second accident involving a farmer's truck and an anti-riot police vehicle, the minister's office said.

Cuvillier said the lifting of the barriers was a "question of responsibility and security".

Protesters 'not responsible' for death

Two unions from the Paris region, the FDSEA and JA, had announced a blockade on Paris to "make the voice of the agriculture sector, which has been sacrificed, heard".

They complained their members were being "bludgeoned" by tax rises as well as by "more and more demanding environmental norms, increasing checks and stronger regulatory mechanisms".

Damien Griffin, the head of the FDSEA spearheading the protest, said the farmers had lifted a barrier where the fatal accident occurred out of "compassion" but told AFP the protesters were not responsible for the fireman's death.

He said the union was particularly upset over the reallocation of subsidies to help cattle farmers at the expense of grain producers which would see the latter "see a fall in income of between 30 and 40 percent".

"They are going to massacre arable and dairy farming," he said.

French President Francois Hollande announced in October that the government would use a renegotiation of the EU's Common Agriculture Policy to favour livestock farmers badly hit by the economic crisis over the better-off crop growers.

He said France would use measures including a subsidy bonus on the first 52 hectares of each farm, seen as favouring smaller livestock farms over giant grain producers.

French police had earlier said several key highways would be affected and advised motorists not to take the A6 linking Paris to the eastern city of Lyon and the A10 which connects the capital to Bordeaux.

Hollande's government has already been forced to suspend the planned introduction of a new environmental "ecotax" on commercial vehicles carrying cargo of more than 3.5 tonnes after violent protests in Brittany, a predominantly agricultural region in northern France.

Opponents of the tax, which critics say unfairly penalises remote areas dependent on deliveries by road freight, are demanding it be scrapped altogether.

.


Related Links
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FARM NEWS
Coconut farmers face ruin after Philippine typhoon
Burawin, Philippines (AFP) Nov 21, 2013
The super typhoon that slammed through the central Philippines laid waste to a vast region of coconut farmland, eradicating in one fell swoop the livelihoods of tens of thousands of smallholders. "It's all gone," Glen Mendoza said, gesturing towards the collection of snapped and toppled trees that used to be the small but reliable grove that fed and supported his family. "My daughter mig ... read more


FARM NEWS
Microbiologists reveal unexpected properties of methane-producing microbe

Boeing Amnd GOL To Boost Aviation Biofuel Production In Brazil

Neutron scattering and supercomputer demystify forces at play in biofuels

Lignin-Feasting Microbe Holds Promise for Biofuels

FARM NEWS
Penguin-inspired propulsion system

Artificial heart to pump human waste into future robots

Quantum world record smashed

Distant artificial atoms cooperate by sharing light, international research team shows

FARM NEWS
IKEA invests in Canadian wind project

High bat mortality from wind turbines

Wind turbines blamed in death of estimated 600,000 bats in 2012

Assessing impact of noise from offshore wind farm construction may help protect marine mammals

FARM NEWS
Nissan says struggling to satisfy China growth

Toyota strikes first-ever hybrid parts sharing deal in China

Tokyo Motor Show focuses on eco-friendly cars

Honda Accord wins green car prize at LA Auto show

FARM NEWS
Ben Gurion Researchers Develop New Type of Crude Oil Using Carbon Dioxide and Hydrogen

Outside View: The strange debate over LNG exports

Britain to join US in ending coal power support abroad

Saudis launch major gas drilling in Red Sea

FARM NEWS
Westinghouse and John Barrow Celebrate Construction Progress at Plant Vogtle

IAEA experts to revisit Fukushima to review shutdown plan

Bolivia says it's on track to develop nuclear power

Fukushima operator starts dangerous fuel-rod removal

FARM NEWS
Serbia signs power plant deal with China

Exxon to sell Hong Kong power company stake

Honda's 'Hydrogen Boy' pees his way to a cleaner world

Tennessee Valley Authority Makes Major Coal Plant Retirement Announcement

FARM NEWS
Bait research focused on outsmarting destructive beetle

Landsat Data Yield Best View to Date of Global Forest Losses, Gains

Has the idea of 'zero deforestation' lost its meaning

Amazon rainforest more able to withstand drought than previously thought




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement