The Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board (AHDB) and the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) have welcomed the second UK Farm Assurance Review (FAR) monitoring report but called for Government to recognise the value of farm assurance.

The UK Farm Assurance Review concluded the final stage of a post-review monitoring exercise with the publication of the second of its monitoring reports, commissioned by NFU and AHDB.

The report was conducted independently by the monitoring and reporting commissioner, Dr David Llewellyn, and was completed in early April 2026. It provides an update on actions taken by organisations tasked to implement the 56 operational UKFAR recommendations focusing on those with a 12-month delivery timescale.

Dr David Llewellyn.

On the release of the report, Dr Llewellyn said: “The fact that 33 organisations have made contributions to this second report is a sign that there is still a commitment, in time, to change the nature and delivery of farm assurance and to reaffirm the position of the farming community as a key element of the farm assurance system.

“The UKFAR appears to have acted as a catalyst for change across the farm assurance system, though it is clear that farm assurance schemes remain at different stages in their adoption of the UKFAR recommendations. The work of some schemes, in particular those in the devolved nations and the progress reported in the Red Tractor (RT) action plan, is welcome.

“Certain industry regulators also stand out as having taken the principles of the UKFAR on board and the main farming organisations are also pressing ahead to see that the UKFAR has a lasting effect.

“There is, however, room for improvement in the way in which UK Governments see the role of farm assurance as a contributor to the development of the industry. Dialogue between the assurance schemes and their respective governments in the devolved nations is taking place, but the picture with Defra is less clear. There was the promise, earlier in the UKFAR, of greater coordination between the UK Governments to take account of the system in their policy making and to reduce duplication of effort, but this has yet to see the light of day.”

Llewellyn highlighted that areas of the report pointed to slow progress, such as in the case of addressing issues identified by the crops sector and the question of how on-farm environmental measures can be systematically implemented, and fairly resourced, if data from them is to be used by other parts of the agri-food system.

He continued: “It is hoped that the progress shown in this report, and that planned for the year ahead, indicates a willingness of many of the respondent organisations to continue to improve the system as a whole, and to enable the farming industry, in due course, to benefit from the changes being made.”

Farming unions call for fairness

Responding to the final FAR progress report, the four UK farming unions said: “Our organisations continue to work hard on multiple aspects of the report’s recommendations to ensure Britain’s farmers and growers have a greater voice in the development of farm assurance standards.

“Although good progress has been made, several areas highlighted within the report still require urgent action.

“On environmental measurement, we must reach a consensus around an industry-led approach and ensure reporting has a clear purpose, provides genuine value and involves farmers and growers from day one.

“Issues within the combinable crops sector also need to be addressed with structural changes urgently needed to abandon the one-size-fits-all approach and lift the unsustainable audit burden on our growers.

“We will continue to engage with the industry and the wider supply chain to make the changes happen that we all want to see.”

“This review marks a vital reset moment to build a modern assurance framework fit for purpose.”

The unions stated: “But as the report makes clear, Government also needs to urgently step up and recognise the value of farm assurance and its role in providing high quality, British food. It must ensure that our farmers and growers are not unfairly forced to compete with imported products that would be illegal to produce here, and establish the fair, transparent marketplace our farmers and growers deserve.

“This review marks a vital reset moment to build a modern assurance framework fit for purpose and the four UK farming unions remain committed to the important role assurance plays in underpinning the safety, traceability and quality of food produced on British farms.”

Emily Norton, AHDB chair.

AHDB chair Emily Norton said: “We would like to thank David Llewellyn and the commissioners for undertaking the original Review and the two progress reports, which were jointly funded by AHDB and the national farming unions.

“Over the past year, we have been working on the 14 practical recommendations we were asked to help deliver.

“AHDB has undertaken an international comparison of standards in the Beef and Lamb sector, and we are currently working through similar analysis in the Dairy sector. In relation to Red Tractor, we are working closely with the other owners to support the ongoing changes within the scheme.”

Alistair Mackintosh, chair of Red Tractor, stated: “Our response to the FAR is part of a long-term commitment to ensuring Red Tractor embeds a more transparent approach, particularly for farmers who must feel represented, listened to and informed.

“We want to restore a sense of pride in British farming standards. Our aim is to deliver a cost-effective scheme that is trusted and valued by farmers, growers, the supply chain, buyers and consumers.”

AHDB and NFU publish paper looking at the value of assurance

AHDB’s Norton continued: “Today, AHDB is also publishing a paper, in conjunction with the NFU, looking at the purpose, scope and value of assurance in general terms. This paper sets out the rationale and purpose of assurance, and the difference between foundational assurance and enhanced or tiered assurance. We intend this paper to serve as the bedrock for the future development of assurance schemes in the UK.

“We will continue to work through the recommendations in the Review and report back to industry as each project is completed. This includes our research into assurance within the Cereals and Oilseeds sector, which we plan to complete by autumn 2026.

“The Farm Assurance Review is helping underpin the critical role farm assurance plays in our industry. We look forward to continuing the conversations with industry partners on the future of assurance and commit to working collaboratively with the industry to support the Review on behalf of our levy payers.”