Winter 2023 and Spring 2024 were among the wettest seasons recorded in England.
From October 2022 to March 2024, England experienced its wettest 18-month period since Met Office records began in 1836. The months from October 2023 to March 2024 marked the wettest October-to-March period ever recorded.
Reflecting the exceptional nature of these events, we are making recovery payments to farmers as a contribution towards the costs incurred following the damage that Storms Babet and Henk and the exceptional wet weather caused during this period.
To support farmers affected by Storms Babet, Henk and severe wet weather, we’re providing a one-off Recovery Payment to help cover the uninsured costs of restoring farmland. Payments will range from £2,895 to £25,000, based on the level of damage.
Following our announcement this summer, we’re now able to confirm how farmers were selected for this support.
Only those identified by the Rural Payments Agency (RPA) will be contacted.
Recovery payments worth £60 million
The Recovery Payments aim to help farmers recover from the extreme wet weather of Winter 2023/24, worsened by two major storms, Storm Babet in the autumn and Storm Henk in January 2024.
The impact on yields and productivity has varied depending on the region, crop, and soil type, with some farms facing additional costs to restore their land to productive use.
Around 13,000 farm businesses will receive this exceptional, one-off payment as a contribution towards these costs.
The Environment Agency and Met Office data was used to identify which farm businesses will receive the recovery payment.
This data on river flooding and exceptional rainfall allows us to pinpoint affected land and make payments directly to eligible farms. By focusing on those with the most significant impacts, this approach ensures the payment contributes to uninsured costs resulting from the extreme wet weather.
There’s no need for farmers to submit an application or claim form. This straightforward process means payments can be made quickly—usually within 28 days of receiving a letter or email from the RPA —without further evidence or confirmation of eligibility.
Eligible farmers can opt out or notify the RPA of any change in circumstances, such as changes in land use for listed parcels, within 10 days of receiving their letter or email.
For queries about your letter, please call the phone number provided. If you believe you are not eligible for the payment despite receiving a letter, you can email the contact address included in your correspondence.
Identifying farmers
The recovery payments are focused on exceptional wet weather impacts in this period and therefore those who are most likely to have had the most significant impacts.
Eligibility covers areas of the most extensive river flooding from the two largest storms in the period plus the areas where extreme rainfall occurred over the six months.
Farmers will receive a letter from the RPA with details of the area of land considered to be eligible for the recovery payment by combining 2 sources of information:
- Flooding from rivers
Data from the Environment Agency was used to track high river levels during Storm Babet (19–25 October 2023) and Storm Henk (2–12 January 2024).
Satellite imagery was used to confirm the land where the river flooding impacts were most severe.
- Exceptional rainfall
Rainfall data from the Met Office identified local authority areas in England where at least half of the area experienced exceptional rainfall (more than 70% above the 30-year average rainfall) from October 2023 to March 2024.
Eligible land parcels were then identified in these areas and payment made for a set proportion of total eligible farm area to take account of uncertainties in the precise extent of localised rainfall impacts across the country.
Farmers whose land is engineered as a flood storage area are not eligible for recovery payments, as they are expected to be prepared for and resilient to flooding.
How the payment is calculated
- An amount of land in eligible areas identified that were affected by high river levels and flooding (from satellite data based on river gauge readings)
- An amount of land in eligible areas identified with extreme rainfall (excluding land already counted for flooding)
- Add the amounts of land calculated in step 1 and step 2 together
- Apply the payment band based on the total eligible hectares.
If, for example, the amount of land parcels affected totals between 1 and 25 hectares of eligible land, farmers will receive a one-off payment of £2,895. The more land affected, the higher the payment, according to the table below.
Payment bands
1.00 – 25.00 ha £2,895
25.01 – 50.00 ha £4,875
50.01 – 75.00 ha £8,125
75.01 – 100.00 ha £11,375
100.01 – 125.00 ha £14,625
125.01 – 150.00 ha £17,875
150.01 – 175.00 ha £21,125
175.01 ha and above £25,000
The recovery payments will only be made to farmers in England as an exceptional, one-off contribution towards the uninsured costs incurred from returning their land to its pre-flooding condition.
Building resilience
To protect land, rural homes, and businesses from flooding we have set up a new Flood Resilience Taskforce to make sure coordination is working between central government and the agencies on the ground. The National Farmers Union (NFU) is a member. It will contribute to future taskforce discussions on the resilience of the agriculture sector to flooding.
Adapting to climate change, including extreme weather, is a shared responsibility. By building resilience now, we can reduce the costs and disruption caused by significant flooding and wet conditions in the future. We’ll continue to work with industry to support better risk management.
Building resilience is an important way to mitigate the long-term risks associated with climate change, market volatility and other environmental factors.
Through our environmental land management schemes, we’re supporting farmers and land managers to invest in actions that will help with water management and build resilience to wet weather. You can read more about these on GOV.UK.
For example, the Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) is designed to help farmers adopt sustainable practices that increase the resilience of their business, food production and the environment.
By enhancing soil health, improving water management, and encouraging biodiversity, these schemes reduce the impact of adverse events, such as extreme weather, helping farmers manage risk directly on their farms.
We are working to create a future where farmers are empowered to manage their risk by taking forward looking actions in their own business, taking up relevant actions for resilience in environmental land management schemes, supporting wider local action to manage flood risk and harnessing commercial insurance markets. This will encourage a more resilient and sustainable agricultural sector.
More broadly, our flood investment programme benefits both urban and rural communities. Around 40% of the Environment Agency’s flood defence schemes — and 45% of their investment — go towards better protecting properties in rural areas.
We are also working to improve the resilience of the agriculture and food sectors against weather extremes and enable better risk management. This includes industry-led efforts, such as the Food and Drink Sector Council's subgroup on resilience.
10 comments
Comment by Edward posted on
I emailed the FRF email a week ago to highlight an error that you have made in calculating the payment to our business but have heard nothing back. How do I contact the FRF team?
Comment by The Team posted on
Hi Edward,
You can email: ruralpayments@defra.gov.uk or call RPA main switchboard: 03000 200 301.
Best wishes,
The Team
Comment by Craig Smith posted on
Have all the farms that will receive the payment been contacted yet ?
I've been waiting for my letter for months but to no avail...
Comment by Sarah Stewart posted on
Hi Craig,
Let me look into this. Can I email you using the email address you provided when you left your question?
Best wishes,
Sarah
Comment by Andrew Sharpe posted on
i have also not been contacted regarding the FRF, my immediate neighbours have all had emails saying they will receive a paymeny
Comment by Sarah Stewart posted on
Hi Andrew,
Can I use the address you supplied when you left your comment to email you?
Best wishes,
Sarah
Comment by Julian Gawthorpe posted on
We had land adjacent to the River Amber at South Wingfield Derbyshire DE55 7LX flooded for a large part of last winter. Three weeks ago our neighbour whose land is immediatly adjacent to ours, that also flooded received his excess rain/flood payment. We have received nothing. Our land is both on the same level and below the River when it is flood. The river level gauge at Wingfield Park is downstream from both our land.
Comment by The Team posted on
Hi Julian,
Thanks for getting in touch. The data the RPA use to calculate the payment is provided by the Environment Agency and Met Office. The RPA is administering the scheme on behalf of DEFRA and are responsible for the application of the methodology only, so any complaints or appeals regarding the Farming Recovery Fund payments will only be able to test that the RPA have correctly applied that methodology to your land parcels.
If you wish to check they have applied the methodology correctly, you can make a formal complaint following the linked complaints procedure below and sending your completed CA4 form to FRF@rpa.gov.uk:
https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/rural-payments-agency/about/complaints-procedure
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/66ac9f7fa3c2a28abb50dbf4/ca4_v8.0_July_2024.pdf
Hope that helps,
The Team
Comment by Emma Curtis posted on
We are farmers in East Yorkshire - our land is crossed by several very large drain/watercourses that flooded badly during the storms Henk and Babet. The watercourses in question are the responsibility of the Environment Agency and the Inland Drainage Board I believe. As a result of the rains and flooding we lost large areas of cropped land and were unable to drill on other large areas. The farming recovery fund seems only to refer to river flooding but large drainage watercourses that have not been adequately managed can overflow to a huge extent as well. We have had no letter from the RPA and our area does not seem to be covered by the fund which feels very wrong. The financial damage that has been caused by the crop loss and inability to drill has had a severe and devastating impact on our farming business in terms of costs and our ability to generate any income. Why is our area not included? Can we appeal this? We can provide clear evidence of the impact of the storms and the affect on costs and finances.
Comment by The Team posted on
Hi Emma,
Thanks for getting in touch. The data the RPA use to calculate the payment is provided by the Environment Agency and Met Office. The RPA is administering the scheme on behalf of DEFRA and is responsible for the application of the methodology only so any complaints or appeals regarding the Farming Recovery Fund payments will only be able to test that the RPA have correctly applied that methodology to your land parcels.
If you wish to make a formal complaint about the administration of the methodologies to your land, you can follow the linked complaints procedure sending your completed CA4 form to FRF@rpa.gov.uk:
https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/rural-payments-agency/about/complaints-procedure
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/66ac9f7fa3c2a28abb50dbf4/ca4_v8.0_July_2024.pdf
Hope that helps,
The Team