The number of dairy farms
suspected of fiddling the books about the age of the cows they have, has soared
to 2,100, farm minister Carola Schouten told MPs on Thursday.
By passing older
calves off as younger animals, farmers can get round strict rules on manure and
phosphate reduction. Adult cows are more polluting, so farmers are claiming
that their cows have given birth to twins or triplets, hiding the true ages of
some calves.
The fraud first came to light last month, when ministry inspectors
found fraud in the registration of calves on half the 93 farms they visited
within a week.
Since then, the inspectors have been comparing different
registration systems and have found possible fraud on 2,100 farms.
‘I consider
the scale of the fraud extremely concerning,’ Schouten told MPs in a briefing.
‘We have to prevent farms which stick to the rules being disadvantaged by those
that fiddle their books.’
Lies
The affected farms have been banned from selling
or buying new cattle until their administration has been approved. Farmers
found to have lied about the ages of their animals face a reduction in
subsidies or criminal prosecution.
At the end of last year, the NRC revealed
that farmers are also committing fraud on a wide scale when it comes to manure.
Farmers are forging their accounts, illegally trading their manure or dumping
more on their land than permitted by law, while transport companies are
fiddling lorry weights and making unrecorded trips to dump manure at night, the
paper said.
In total, the NRC found that 36 of the 56 manure processing and
distribution companies in the two regions had been fined for fraud, or
suspected of fraud, in what the paper calls the ‘manure conspiracy’.

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