Contact AEA:

Samuelson House
62 Forder Way
Hampton
Peterborough
PE7 8JB

Telephone: 0845 6448748
Fax: 01733 314767

E-mail: ab@aea.uk.com

AEA Overseas programme 2011-2012

Under the UKTI TAP programme (Tradeshow Access Programme) the AEA has been successful in obtaining grant funding for the following events:-

Potato Europe, Belgium, September 2011
Agritechnica, Germany, November 2011
Fruit Logistica, Germany, February 2012 jointly with the Commercial Horticultural Association
Golf Industry Show, USA, February 2012

A participant must be a UK based business or organisation that is either actively investigating export opportunities or is already involved in exporting from the UK.
A participant must be a small to medium sized enterprise.
A participant must be a new exporter or have exported for no more than 10 years (the requirement to be a new exporter for less than 10 years will be waived where the applicant has not attended the previous edition of the event).

For further information and details of grants contact Debbie export@aea.uk.com

Greenhouse Action Plan

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Greenhouse Action Plan (GHGAP)

 

The AEA is a partner along with 15 other major industry representative bodies in providing a plan to reduce Greenhouse Gas emissions within agriculture.

 

Why?

Over the next 40 years, the global food system will have to feed more people with less impact.  This will mean providing a higher quality diet whilst dealing with greater competition for land, water and energy and the economic and political pressures of globalisation as the climate changes.  Our farmers and growers will need to adapt to the changing conditions alongside reducing greenhouse gas emissions.  Greenhouse gases are an inevitable consequence of food production, and the challenge of reducing them whilst increasing food production is huge.

 

Commitment

The Greenhouse Gas Action Plan (GHGAP) sets out how the agriculture industry in England is responding to this challenge.  It shows our commitment to playing our part in tackling climate change by reducing our greenhouse gas emissions by three million tonnes of CO2 equivalent per year from 2018-2022. The GHGAP is one of a range of initiatives that are already helping farming produce more whilst impacting less. 

 

What are we going to do?

We aim to meet this challenge without compromising domestic production. It’s too simple a solution to produce less and import more.  This simply “exports” our emissions to other parts of the world.  So our Action Plan focuses on how farmers, across all sectors and farming systems, can become more efficient to help reduce greenhouse gas emissions and make cost savings per unit of production.

 

Agriculture can also make a big contribution to mitigating climate change by storing carbon in soils and vegetation and by generating renewable energy.  We are determined to show that farming is part of the solution. 

 

How are we going to do this?

We’re going to make the most of what’s already in place and what new science tells us, so that we get better at what we do.  We’re going to use trusted routes of influence to help farmers and land managers carry out the GHGAP’s priority actions – by improving their use of energy and nutrients, their management of crops and livestock and reducing their own carbon footprint.

 

This is an unprecedented partnership of sixteen organisations (and the number is likely to grow) representing the breadth of the agricultural industry in England.   We’re going to focus on how we can work better together, with Government and with the food supply chain. We will regularly report on progress so that farmers and land managers can be confident that their changes in farm practice are leading to lower emissions.

 

Further information is given in a short Position Paper and a full copy of the Delivery Plan is also available.

 

 

Machinery Thefts

NFU Mutual reports UK farm machinery thefts rose by 5.5% in 2009, costing the industry £42.2 million. Quad bikes head up the top 10 crime list, followed by power tools, Land Rovers/4 by 4s but then come tractors which are now being stolen to order. This fits the picture as described by our members where organised crime is now taking over from the more casual theft seen before and customers are requesting more security.

The AEA backs the CESAR system but this is a deterrent rather than a complete cure and so a multiple approach is needed with immobilizers and trackers becoming more common. Lawnmowers now come in at number 8 on the list.

Look Behind You

This document has been prepared by the Service Managers group of the AEA as a guide to trailed equipment braking.

Click here to download the document