An important report on the next reform of the CAP has been produced for the European Parliament Agri Committee: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/STUD/2025/759316/CASP_STU(2025)759316_EN.pdf
The report notes: 'The European agri-food system is facing an increasing number of challenges. Most of these challenges were already present when the current CAP was discussed. Other challenges, such as global food security on the European continent and the autonomy of European agriculture, have been put back on the agenda due to the Covid-19 crisis, the war in Ukraine, world geopolitical tensions and agricultural protests.'
The report helpfully distinguishes five future pathways: Within the two “production” pathways (Pathways A and B), there is a second trade-off between Pathway A (Intensification and exports)based on price competitiveness and Pathway B (Support for all types of farms)which aims at maintaining productive capacity by supporting farm incomes for all types of farms Within the three “climate and environment pathways, Pathway C (Resource use efficiency through the optimisation of current production systems), contrasts with Pathways D and E, which require much more profound changes (land-sparing for Pathway D vs land-sharing/agro-ecology for Pathway E).
The report comments: 'The dominance of transnational companies in food value chains is high and increasing (Howard, 2016). Industrial concentration is very high in the global agricultural commodity market, agri-food industries and farm input suppliers(seeds, pesticides, farm equipment, etc.). Multinational firms have a strong incentive to lobby against measures at the EU border.'
The report also notes: 'The growth in the economic power of multinational companies gives them increasing power over political processes. Interest groups that are financially and politically powerful are able to discredit their rivals on policy decisions (see, for example, Oreskes and Conway, 2010). The EU and MSs should strengthen the rules on the integrity and transparency of lobbying to improve the trade policy-making process.'