EU farmers will get financial help of up to €125 million to help them cope with the impact of Russia’s ban on most Western food imports, which has created a glut of fruit and vegetables in peak harvest time, the European Commission said yesterday.

Russia has declared a one-year embargo on meat, fish, dairy, fruit and vegetables from the US, the EU, Canada, Australia and Norway in retaliation for Western economic sanctions over Moscow’s actions in Ukraine.

The Commission said it was drawing on provisions in the reformed Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), which includes an emergency reserve of some €420 million in total to compensate for market disruption.

The money will be available between now and the end of November.

“With effect from today, I am triggering CAP emergency measures which will reduce the overall supply of a number of fruit and vegetable products on the European market as and when price pressures become too great in the coming months,” Agriculture Commissioner Dacian Ciolos said.

“All farmers of the concerned products, whether in producer organisations or not, will be eligible to take up these market support measures.”

The aim is to reduce some of the surplus in the market by giving producers funding to compensate for fruit and vegetables either withdrawn from the market and distributed free or not harvested in the first place.

Products covered by the measures will include tomatoes, cauliflowers, mushrooms, grapes, cucumbers and other products in season, lacking storage options and having no immediate alternative markets to make up for the absence of Russia.

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