‘British food will disappear’: trade deal after Brexit is hitting UK farmers hard. Home-grown food may become a niche product for wealthy in our supermarkets as British farmers’ incomes plummetFor Liz Webster, who farms 647 hectares (1600 acres) in Wiltshire, south west England, the latest impact of Brexit has been particularly brutal.
A apuração publicada por www.theguardian.com vira base para uma leitura editorial direta e contextualizada.
Trechos de apoio da pauta: Home-grown food may become a niche product for wealthy in our supermarkets as British farmers’ incomes plummetFor Liz Webster, who farms 647 hectares (1600 acres) in Wiltshire, south west England, the latest impact of Brexit has been particularly brutal. About £400 per animal has been wiped off the price she can get for her beef cattle, a hefty blow at a time when all the inputs – feed, energy, fertiliser – are going through the roof.The fall in price, on livestock that typically fetch £2,000 to £3,000 per animal, is the result of a flood of cheaper meat arriving from Australia, the result of one of the new trade deals the government has signed since the UK left the European Union.
- Ponto de atenção: british.
- Ponto de atenção: food.
- Ponto de atenção: will.
Em resumo, a leitura editorial acompanha o impacto do tema no nicho Agro. Quando fizer sentido, a referência complementar pode ser acessada em direto do produtor.