Sunday, September 25, 2022
Agri Food Tech News
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • AgriTech
  • FoodTech
  • Farming
  • Organic Farming
  • Machinery
  • Markets
  • Food Safety
  • Fertilizers
  • Lifestyle
No Result
View All Result
Agri Food Tech News
  • Home
  • AgriTech
  • FoodTech
  • Farming
  • Organic Farming
  • Machinery
  • Markets
  • Food Safety
  • Fertilizers
  • Lifestyle
No Result
View All Result
Agri Food Tech News
No Result
View All Result

Editor’s view: Funeral was a model of good planning and staff

by agrifood
September 25, 2022
in Farming
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
0
Home Farming
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Who lives in a house like this? Let’s go through the keyhole.

The funeral of the Queen on Monday 19 September was the fitting culmination to a carefully choreographed period of mourning that attracted an international audience of hundreds of millions.

What lasting impression of our “house” will have been created for outsiders by this brief glimpse into a very special moment in British life?

See also: Editor’s view: Rural respite aided the Queen’s remarkable reign

About the author

Andrew Meredith

Farmers Weekly editor

Andrew has been Farmers Weekly editor since January 2021 after doing stints on the business and arable desk. Before joining the team, he worked on his family’s upland beef and sheep farm in mid Wales and studied agriculture at Aberystwyth University. In his free time he can normally be found continuing his research into which shop sells London’s finest Scotch egg.

Contact:

It will have built or cemented their impression that the United Kingdom is a place that is rich in pageantry, pomp and ceremony, and very attached to tradition – we still lead the world in putting on a show.

Engineering a spectacle that went off like clockwork will have made them think that things run like that here the rest of the time. Which got me thinking – why don’t they?

It should not be surprising that something that has been silently prepared for by some of the best planning minds in the country for at least a decade has a good chance of running smoothly when the time for action arises.

Any manager will also tell you that for a plan to survive its first contact with reality, it also relies on the team entrusted to put it into practice.

Could there have been a more motivated team than the civil service, the armed forces and a senior cadre of bishops to manage the funeral, when Her Majesty was a much-loved head of state, head of the armed forces and head of the Church of England?

Good staff and time to make careful plans for the future – even the worst-case scenarios – are vital ingredients for businesses, great and small, to succeed in the long term.

That both are in short supply on farms should be a cause for concern, and the two are linked. If a labour shortage means you are continually battling to get through the day, it is enormously difficult to look much further ahead than the middle of next week.

But if long-term planning is neglected, it finds a way to come back to bite you. This is particularly true with succession planning – a smooth transition between generations never happens by accident.

Short-termism is also a charge frequently levelled at government, including by the agricultural sector.

How else do you explain the lack of attention being paid to the pig industry, with policymakers content to allow farmers to plunge into debt after two years of continuous losses?

See also: Labour woes and soaring costs push more pig farmers to the wall

Individual business owners who exit are making an economically rational choice that is right for them and their families, but we are all poorer if we allow yet more of our requirements to come from overseas.

Indeed, as we report this week, a week’s worth of pigs may be missing by Christmas, and many of these losses are said to be coming from independent pig farmers.

The metaphor we need to employ in talks with the new Truss administration is that of our military defence.

Keeping Britain safe means being part of grand alliances that safeguard our national security. We cannot walk alone in the world militarily, nor can we produce all our own food.

But this does not mean we do not need the ability to produce a good part of our own munitions – and our rations.

And while that does not mean every business has the right to survive, it means that a more muscular defence of domestic food production is entirely sensible in the volatile world we inhabit, starting with pork.



Source link

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pocket (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...
Tags: EditorsFuneralGOODmodelPlanningstaffview
Share30Tweet19
Previous Post

Humans are dosing Earth’s waterways with medicines. It isn’t healthy.

Next Post

Industry gears up for Back British Farming Day

Recommended For You

This Week in Farming: Tax cuts, fit farmers and new Valtra

by agrifood
September 23, 2022
0

Welcome back to This Week in Farming, your weekly update of the best news and views from the Farmers Weekly website. Every Saturday we round-up the five most...

Read more

Opinion: What do the 2020s and 1970s have in common?

by agrifood
September 24, 2022
0

Watcher! The 2020s are quickly turning into a carbon copy of the 1970s, and farming friends have commented that I seem sharper mentally, stand a little taller and...

Read more

Organic experts needed to shape government policy

by agrifood
September 24, 2022
0

Organic farming experts are being sought by Defra to advise the four UK governments on future policy in this sector. The Expert Group on Organic Production (EGOP) will...

Read more

Defra considers £80/acre area payment, Ben Goldsmith claims

by agrifood
September 24, 2022
0

Industry leaders have given a mixed reaction to unconfirmed reports that Defra is considering the launch of an area payments scheme that would pay all landowners in England...

Read more

Labour woes and soaring costs push more pig farmers to the wall

by agrifood
September 23, 2022
0

Pig producers in England and Wales have endured seven successive quarters of negative margins, and cumulative losses are estimated at £600m since autumn 2020, AHDB figures show. The...

Read more
Next Post

Industry gears up for Back British Farming Day

Labour woes and soaring costs push more pig farmers to the wall

LATEST UPDATES

AgriTech

Meet the Modern Farmer Helping Immigrant Farmers Sell Their Produce

by agrifood
September 25, 2022
0

A magical interplay of food, culture and people occurs every Tuesday and Thursday at the Southside Community Land Trust (SCLT)...

Europe sees large drop in E. coli infections in 2020

September 25, 2022

Defra confirms landlords cannot apply for lump-sum exit cash

September 25, 2022

In Awe of the Pawpaw

September 24, 2022

FDA warns about Mother’s Touch baby formula that does not conform to standards

September 23, 2022

Scientists find large gap in anisakis estimates and official statistics

September 24, 2022

Get the free newsletter

Browse by Category

  • AgriTech
  • Farming
  • Fertilizers
  • Food Safety
  • FoodTech
  • Lifestyle
  • Machinery
  • Markets
  • Organic Farming
  • Uncategorized
Agri Food Tech News

Agri FoodTech News provides in-depth journalism and insight into the most impactful news and updates about shaping the business of Agriculture

CATEGORIES

  • AgriTech
  • Farming
  • Fertilizers
  • Food Safety
  • FoodTech
  • Lifestyle
  • Machinery
  • Markets
  • Organic Farming
  • Uncategorized

RECENT UPDATES

  • Meet the Modern Farmer Helping Immigrant Farmers Sell Their Produce
  • Europe sees large drop in E. coli infections in 2020
  • Defra confirms landlords cannot apply for lump-sum exit cash
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2022 - Agri FoodTech News .
Agri FoodTech News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • AgriTech
  • FoodTech
  • Farming
  • Organic Farming
  • Machinery
  • Markets
  • Food Safety
  • Fertilizers
  • Lifestyle

Copyright © 2022 - Agri FoodTech News .
Agri FoodTech News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

%d bloggers like this: