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Departmental Catering

Mr. Paice: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs what proportion of food served in his Department’s catering establishments was of British origin in 2005; and what instructions he has issued to the provider of food services regarding the sourcing of food. [78162]

Barry Gardiner [holding answer 16 June 2006]: From information held centrally, the proportion of food served in the Department’s catering establishments that is of British origin is 100 per cent. for eggs and milk products; 90 per cent. for cheeses; 80 per cent. to100 per cent. for root vegetables; 50 per cent. to 80 per cent. for salad vegetables; 25 per cent. to 40 per cent.
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for fruit; 85 per cent. for fish; 100 per cent. for bakery products; 80 per cent. for chicken; 70 per cent. for beef; 15 per cent. for lamb; 25 per cent. for bacon and 90 per cent. for pork.

DEFRA’s catering services providers are required to use food produce which is fresh and seasonal including organic produce. They are also required to develop the use of small and medium sized enterprises in their food supply chains. The catering services providers are required to have full regard to the objectives of the Public Sector Food Procurement Initiative (PSFPI). The service performance of the catering services providers is the subject of continuous assessment and review.

Departmental Chief Accounting Officer

Chris Huhne: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs what the (a) name, (b) professional and academic qualifications and (c) relevant experience are of the chief accounting officer of his Department. [76794]

Barry Gardiner: I refer to my answer of30 November 2005, Official Report, column 506W, which gave details of the Department’s Finance Director. The Department’s Principal Accounting Officer is Helen Ghosh, Permanent Secretary.

Accounting Officer is a role that the Permanent Secretary combines with her personal responsibility for the overall organisation, management and staffing of the department and for department-wide procedures in financial and other matters. The Accounting Officer is assisted in the discharge of these duties by suitably qualified and experienced senior managers, such as the Finance Director.

Departmental Pensions

Mr. Rob Wilson: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs if he will estimate the pension liability of his Department over the next 30 years. [75274]

Barry Gardiner: A technical note by HM Treasury which was placed in the Library of the House on2 March 2006 following an oral statement in Parliament by the then Chief Secretary to the Treasury, 2 March 2006, Official Report, columns 388-390.

Pension liabilities are not estimated for individual Departments, they are estimated for individual pension schemes, as shown in the breakdown of liabilities per pension scheme given in table 1 of the technical note. The technical note covers all the major schemes.

The technical note provides detailed information about the size and nature of the liabilities and how they are calculated. Pension liabilities represent obligations already incurred which will fall due to be met over many decades, up to 80 years or more. Neither Government nor private sector pension providers engage in speculation about additional liabilities that might be incurred in future years.


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Departmental Premises (Security)

Mr. Andrew Turner: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs what measures are in place to ensure that no illegal immigrants are employed in the manned guarding of his Department’s premises. [80797]

Barry Gardiner: For our main headquarters buildings we employ a mix of in-house and contract guards. For the former we carry out a robust basic check on all successful applicants which includes confirmation of identity, nationality (including right to work), criminal record declaration and references. Following a successful outcome of the basic check all guards undergo formal security vetting.

All contract guards throughout the DEFRA estate must be licensed under the Private Security Industry Act 2001. This provides us with assurance that identities and criminal records have been checked. For headquarters-based contract guards we also subject them to formal security vetting as a matter of routine.

Mr. Andrew Turner: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs whether his Department has (a) directly and (b) indirectly employed illegal immigrants as security guards. [80814]

Barry Gardiner: We are not aware that we have directly or indirectly employed illegal immigrants as security guards.

Departmental Staff

David Simpson: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs how many people over the age of 55 years have been recruited into his Department in each of the last three years. [77273]

Barry Gardiner: The number of people over the age of 55 recruited into DEFRA, the Government Decontamination Service, the Marine Fisheries Agency, the Pesticides Safety Directorate, the State Veterinary Service, the Veterinary Laboratories Agency and the Veterinary Medicines Directorate in the each of the last three calendar years was as follows:

Number

2003

58

2004

53

2005

57


Departmental Websites

Charles Hendry: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs how many websites there are within his responsibilities; and what the total cost of maintaining such websites was in the last year for which figures are available. [79059]

Barry Gardiner: DEFRA directly operates a number of websites, including the main DEFRA website
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(www.defra.gov.uk) and the Government’s sustainable development website (www.sustainable-development.gov.uk).

Direct operating costs—the staff costs for the central team with lead responsibility for updating and maintaining websites and for website policy—are estimated to be around £352,000 for the last financial year. Additional costs arise from the activities of a large number of staff in business units across the Department, contributing to the content of websites as part of their communications activities, but an overall cost for this could not be readily estimated. Website hosting services—as well as a range of IT applications—are provided as part of DEFRA’s overall IT service provision and the costs could not be readily disaggregated.

A number of other websites are operated by or on behalf of the Department, its agencies and non-departmental public bodies, for which costs are either covered by the budgets for specific programmes (and not separately identified), or included within the above figures. Detailed information is not currently held centrally for such websites, and could not be obtained without incurring disproportionate cost.

Farm Employment

Mr. Laws: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs how many people were employed in (a) dairy farming, (b) beef farming, (c) sheep farming, (d) arable farming, (e) mixed farming and (f) other forms of farming in Yeovil constituency in (i) 1990, (ii) 2000 and (iii) 2005. [82184]

Barry Gardiner: The number of people working on agricultural and horticultural holdings in Yeovil constituency by predominant farm type are as follows. constituency level data are not available before 1998. Changes in farm type classifications mean figures for the cattle and sheep and grazing livestock categories are not directly comparable across the years.


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Farm type 2000 2005

Employees (including salaried manager and casual workers)

Cereals

17

25

General cropping

68

41

Horticulture

208

179

Pigs and poultry

27

9

Dairy

193

175

Cattle and sheep (less favoured area)

0

n/a

Grazing livestock (less favoured area)

n/a

0

Cattle and sheep (lowland)

74

n/a

Grazing livestock (lowland)

n/a

105

Mixed

69

29

Other types

48

42

Total labour force (including farmers, partners, directors and employees)

Cereals

71

110

General cropping

133

87

Horticulture

283

265

Pigs and poultry

65

59

Dairy

515

444

Cattle and sheep (less favoured area)

0

n/a

Grazing livestock (less favoured area)

n/a

0

Cattle and sheep (lowland)

413

n/a

Grazing livestock (lowland)

n/a

489

Mixed

152

105

Other types

199

156

Source: June Agricultural Survey

Farm Payments

Mr. Paice: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs whether he plans to pay interest on outstanding payments due on (a) hill farm allowance, (b) protein supplements and (c) energy crop supplements. [82487]

Barry Gardiner [holding answer 4 July 2006]: The protein supplements and aid for energy crops are made under Pillar 1 of the Common Agricultural Policy and have a legal payment deadline of 30 June 2006. As such, the Rural Payments Agency will be making interest payments at the London Interbank Offered Rate +1 per cent., calculated from 1 July 2006, in respect of any such payments which are paid after this deadline and where responsibility for the delay rests with the Rural Payments Agency. This will be subject to a minimum interest payment level of £50.

The hill farm allowance payments are made under Pillar 2 (Rural Development) of the Common Agricultural Policy and have no legal deadline. At present we do not consider that there is a case for the payment of interest in respect of hill farm allowance.

Fish Deaths (Cuckoo Hollow)

Mr. Stewart Jackson: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs if he will ask the Environment Agency to investigate the circumstances surrounding the death by asphyxiation of 5,000 fish at Cuckoo Hollow, Werrington, Peterborough on 15 June 2006; whether the Agency has in place a plan to prevent similar occurrences during future periods of hot weather; and if he will make a statement. [82453]

Mr. Bradshaw [holding answer 5 July 2006]: The Environment Agency has been fully involved in investigating the incident at Cuckoo Hollow. Agency staff found that dissolved oxygen levels in the lake were very low, largely because of high temperatures over the previous weekend. Action was taken by Agency staff to replenish oxygen levels in the lake, and to ensure that there were no signs of any chemical pollution.

The Environment Agency is continuing to work with Peterborough city council, the owner of the lake, to ensure actions are taken to minimise any possibility of a reoccurrence in the future.


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Judicial Review

Mr. Amess: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on what occasions an (a) individual and (b) organisation has applied for a judicial review of decisions of his Department in each year since 1997; and what the outcome was of each case where proceedings have been completed. [80478]

Barry Gardiner: The information requested is not held centrally and could be obtained only at disproportionate cost.

Marine Bill

Lyn Brown: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs when he expects to present a draft Marine Bill to Parliament; and if he will make a statement. [82157]

Mr. Bradshaw: I refer my hon. Friend to the answer given on 3 July 2006, Official Report, column 745W.

Meat Imports

Peter Luff: To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs how many tonnes of beef and beef products were imported into the UK from (a) other EU member states and (b) other countries in (i) 2004 and (ii) 2005. [81208]

Mr. Bradshaw: The following table shows imports of beef and beef products into the UK split by EU countries and other countries.


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Imports of beef and beef products into the UK
Tonnes
EU/Non-EU Beef product Country 2004 2005

EU

Beef (fresh or chilled)

Irish Republic

130,020

108,270

Netherlands

10,134

9,165

Germany

4,794

2,805

Poland

2,340

2,760

Denmark

1,779

1,412

France

1,698

1,416

Belgium

1,621

1,315

Italy

1,492

975

Other

430

227

Beef Product

Irish Republic

69,458

94,430

Netherlands

5,758

5,861

Germany

3,063

4,794

Denmark

4,510

1,972

France

2,494

2,776

Belgium

1,495

1,926

Sweden

502

747

Poland

422

287

Other

710

529

Beef (frozen)

Irish Republic

29,567

28,270

Germany

5,341

6,400

Italy

7,622

3,006

Netherlands

6,980

3,497

France

5,064

2,370

Belgium

3,208

2,558

Spain

1,388

622

Denmark

877

682

Poland

384

634

Other

142

32

EU Total

303,291

289,737

Non-EU

Beef Product

Brazil

59,008

53,576

Argentina

9,101

7,574

Uruguay

4,233

4,987

South Africa

388

254

Botswana

285

201

New Zealand

32

311

Other

607

255

Beef (fresh or chilled)

Brazil

13,826

13,811

Argentina

6,110

6,647

Namibia

5,723

5,649

Uruguay

4,472

5,669

Australia

5,227

4,631

Botswana

4,052

3,048

Chile

135

886

Other

303

209

Beef (frozen)

Brazil

20,785

18,365

Argentina

2,531

2,590

Uruguay

1,099

1,202

Botswana

796

414

Namibia

489

213

Other

183

137

Non-EU Total

139,384

130,628

Grand Total

442,675

420,365

Notes: 1. Data prepared by Trade statistics, Agricultural Statistics and Analysis Division, DEFRA. 2. 2005 data is subject to amendments. 3. EU data based on EU 25. Source: H M Revenue and Customs


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