Farming Conference 2021/22

Our one day virtual Farming conference has been specifically designed for partners and managers with responsibility for a number of farming clients. It is a specialist conference looking at a wide range of practical issues which will enable those attending to provide the best possible advice to their clients.

 

Who should attend the conference

Mercia's Farming Conference is a must-attend event for any accountancy firms with farming and agricultural clients.

Through this one-day virtual conference, you will get practical advice about all the latest changes and challenges currently facing the farming industry. Hear from tax experts and even farmers themselves on how you can add value to your clients.

Perfect for:

  • Firms with existing farming and agricultural clients
  • Firms looking to expand into the agricultural sector
  • Partners & managers looking for practical advice

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Full conference agenda


Graham Redman, The Andersons Centre

This session will cover:

  • Current farm profitability and financial situation
  • Trade and policy changes
  • Market developments and outlook for the main farming sectors
  • The future of UK farming

Jeremy Moody, CAAV

This session will cover

  • Climate Change – the Great Driver: Issues, Policies and Carbon
  • The Environment Act – Biodiversity Gain
  • The Re-electrification of the Countryside
  • The Planning Bill – Land Use and Development

Bob Trunchion, MHA MacIntyre Hudson

Farms are machinery intensive! Capital Allowances on Plant and Structures are hugely important to the farming business.

In this session, Bob will cover the latest position on this particularly looking at:

  • Structures and allowances in the light of case law developments
  • Newer allowances such as SBAs, super-deductions and their implications
  • Maximising reliefs on Capex

David Missen, MHA

This session will cover:

  • The impact of subsidy withdrawal on the industry, generally and specifically
  • The detailed pattern of withdrawal and cashflow implications
  • Mitigating the damage - options available
  • Real life case study showing what might happen if the issue is not addressed, and how the damage can be mitigated
  • The ELMs pilot and what it will mean to a sample farm, practically and financially

An opportunity to hear from a farmer about current issues and how accountants can really add value to their clients.


This session will cover:

  • From Basic Payment to Productivity
  • The Road to 2024: England’s Unfolding Environmental Land Management Schemes

Pat Nown, Mercia Group

This session will cover any topical tax issues and updates relevant and useful to those involved in advising farmers. 


David Missen, MHA

This session will cover:

  • The actual and perceived pros and cons of a specialist agricultural department
  • Setting it up - practicalities and internal procedures
  • Recruitment and training
  • Management, billing financial performance and quality control
  • Effective practice development

Conference speakers


Graham Redman

Graham is a Partner of The Andersons Centre, author of the John Nix Farm Management Pocketbook and a Director of Agro Business Consultants.

He has been an agricultural economist at The Andersons Centre since 2004. He provides specialist agri-business research services, to public and private organisations alike. These include training, briefings, agricultural modeling and lead project-work. The Andersons Centre is a multi-disciplined farming and agribusiness consultancy, providing advice and interpretation to all sectors in the agricultural supply chain.

Before joining Andersons, Graham was the economist for a major agricultural merchant, focussing chiefly on grain and animal feed marketing providing guidance to the grain trading and grain procurement teams. Prior to that, he was a farm management consultant for a national firm in Central and Southern England. He has worked extensively on several types of farm.

Graham has agricultural degrees from Leeds and Reading Universities.

He is a Council Member for the Institute of Agricultural Management and a Chartered Environmentalist.


Pat Nown

Pat is a tax consultant lecturer at Mercia Group.

Pat originally trained and worked in the profession for Ernst & Young, Grant Thornton and KPMG before moving to the University of Derby as their senior tax lecturer. Her time at Derby included undergraduate and professional tax training as well as being involved in examinations and publishing projects for ACCA and other professional bodies.

This led to a ten year period with the Financial Training Company now Kaplan where she was Tax Product Director for the Midlands as well as becoming well known as a prominent exam based tax lecturer. Over her career Pat has been actively involved in the tax professional bodies including serving as a Council member for 12 years for the Association of Taxation Technicians.


Jeremy Moody

Jeremy is Secretary and Adviser to the Central Association of Agricultural Valuers and an independent adviser.


Bob Trunchion

Bob is a tax partner with MHA MacIntyre Hudson and is deeply involved in tax training.

However, he is not just a trainer as he has remained involved in client facing matters so he has seen the risk from the tax engagement grow over the years. He has a wide range of tax knowledge and has been lecturing on a range of tax related subjects for over 25 years including the PII aspects. He has found that tax has become ten times as complex since he started lecturing.


Bob has written a Tax Procedures Manual to help reduce risk for the tax practice and has regularly contributed to articles on technical tax subjects over the years.


David Missen

Having previously been a Partner within a regional firm of chartered accountants, David is now an independent consultant. He is an agriculture subject matter expert for the ICAEW farming community and also writes assignments and lectures for firms within the sector. He has his own small farm which he has expanded with a mixture of arable, solar and stewardship areas.


James Price

James is an arable farmer who is pursuing his goal to both improve the quality of his soils and be more precise in every input. This has led to a successful and profitable business and also industry recognition, his current position as the only farmer on DEFRA’s new ‘Nutrient Management Expert Group’ is a key example. He farms 2000ac in a family partnership with a mixture of owned, tenanted and contract farmed land and he worked alongside Yara and Yorkshire based Precision Decisions for 5 years covering all aspects of precision farming with an emphasis on nutrient management.

James is ranked in the top 5% of farmers for low growing costs and uses nearly half the average amount of diesel per ha despite having ploughing in the rotation. His passion for improving his soils has led to the re-introduction of livestock onto the farm with both sheep and cattle during the winter. These, combined with cover crops
and organic manures, have led to him being at the forefront of regenerative farming.

One Day Conference
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