UK Parliament / Open data

Scottish Office

Written question asked by Andrew Welsh (Scottish National Party) on Wednesday, 19 March 1997, in the House of Commons. It was due for an answer on Wednesday, 19 March 1997. It was answered by Raymond Robertson (Conservative) on Wednesday, 19 March 1997 on behalf of the Scottish Office.

Question

What have been the costs of the BSE crisis in Scotland to public funds. - Inc table. (Holding answer 28 February 1997).

Answer

Mr. Welsh: To ask the Secretary of State for Scotland what have been the costs of the BSE crisis in Scotland to public funds; and if he will make a statement. [18005] Mr. Raymond S. Robertson: [holding answer 28 February 1997]: The Government's concern has been to provide support in a way which benefits all parts of the beef chain and enables a recovery of market confidence. The current estimates of the extra amounts paid out as a result of the BSE crisis in Scotland to the industry under the following schemes to 31 December 1996 are as follows: _________________________________________________________________________________________________. £ million Beef special premium and suckler cow premium schemes: top-ups 16.6 Beef marketing payment scheme 7.0 Over-30-months scheme: producers payments 65.9 slaughter and rendering fees 13.5 Calf processing scheme 2.6 Slaughtering industry (emergency aid) scheme 1996 10.0 _________________________________________________________________________________________________. Also, in the period 1 April 1996 to 31 December 1996, the EU agreed to accept 10,901 tonnes of beef into intervention from Scotland at an estimated buying-in cost of around £22 million.

Type
Written question
Reference
18005; 292 c662W
Session
1996-97
Contains statistics
Yes
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