A new set of entitlements will be allocated to farmers under the Basic Payment Scheme if they apply for such by submitting a Basic Payment Scheme application in 2015 and meet the conditions for eligibility.
Main Features of the Basic Payment Scheme
The Basic Payment Scheme will operate in much the same way as the current Single Payment Scheme;
Similarities
which hectares are eligible for payment.
holds.
two consecutive years will revert to the National Reserve.
that person.
Differences
However there are also significant differences between the current Single Payment Scheme and the Basic
Payment Scheme;
Payment Scheme national average will remain unchanged). Unlike the Single Payment Scheme
therefore, the value of entitlements does not remain static but will change from year to year.
Basic Payment Scheme entitlements.)
be given priority usage in the following year. In effect this means that if a farmer fails to use 100%
of his/her entitlements in at least one year of a two year period, the unused entitlements will
revert to the National Reserve.
Reference Points
The current Single Payment Scheme is based on ‘production’ during the ‘reference period’ of 2000-2002. There is no such ‘production reference period’ under the new scheme. However the new scheme does make use of ‘reference points’ for three distinct purposes;
To be eligible for the automatic allocation of entitlements under the new scheme, a farmer must
have been eligible to receive a direct payment under the 2013 scheme year.
The number of entitlements that will be allocated to a farmer in 2015 under the new Basic
Payment Scheme will be based on the number of eligible hectares the farmer declares in either
2013 or 2015, whichever is less.
The total value of entitlements owned (held or leased out) by a farmer under the Single Payment
Scheme in 2014 and where relevant the value of payment received under the Grassland Sheep
Scheme forms the basis for calculating the value of his entitlements in 2015 under the Basic
Payment Scheme. A percentage of each farmer’s 2014 value is carried forward and is used to
calculate the ‘Initial Unit Value’ for each farmer in 2015.
As the Basic Payment Scheme ceiling represents only a percentage of the 2014 value that will be
carried forward, only a percentage of a farmer’s 2014 value of entitlements and the same
percentage of Grassland Sheep Scheme payment where applicable is carried forward when
calculating the value of his entitlements in 2015.
The following chart illustrates the relationship between these three reference points. The fundamental requirement is that a farmer holds an ‘allocation right’ (No. 1 above). A farmer who holds a ‘value’ (No. 3 above) and/or a ‘land reference’ (No. 2 above) but does not hold an ‘allocation right’ is not eligible to receive an allocation of entitlements under the Basic Payment Scheme in 2015. For this reason, persons who do not hold an allocation right are advised against buying entitlements in 2014. While such entitlements could be used under the 2014 scheme year, they would not carry forward to the new scheme in 2015 but would simply expire.
Each of these three reference points is explained in detail in the following sections.