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Prime Minister David Cameron visits Royal Welsh Show David Cameron announces £7bn foods growth plan at Royal Welsh Show
(about 1 hour later)
David Cameron is visiting the Royal Welsh Show after announcing a £390m deal for armoured vehicles to be produced in south Wales. David Cameron has announced plans to grow food and farming exports by £7bn while visiting the Royal Welsh show in Powys.
The prime minister arrived at Llanelwedd, near Builth Wells, on Thursday morning. The prime minster detailed the measures after arriving at the Builth Wells event on Thursday.
Earlier, he released details of General Dynamics' takeover of a former fork-lift site in Merthyr Tydfil. He revealed a series of proposals to "cut red tape" for English farmers.
It follows a deal to buy 589 Scout Specialist Vehicles at Oakdale in Caerphilly county. Mr Cameron urged the Welsh government to "to do more to simplify inspections to benefit the industry and rural communities" in Wales.
He said: "I am very pleased to be at the Royal Welsh Show today to see the best in livestock, food and drink Wales has to offer." In a Downing Street statement, the prime minister said: "I am very pleased to be at the Royal Welsh Show today to see the best in livestock, food and drink Wales has to offer.
The prime minister also revealed on Thursday his government was keen to persuade the famous car brand Aston Martin to make a home for itself in the Vale of Glamorgan, by the MoD vacating land at St Athan. Sell more
"Farming and food production are a fundamental part of our rural economy.
"As a one nation government, we will keep on backing British farmers to grow and sell more home-grown food by liberating them from red tape and opening up new multi-million pound export markets."
There would be 20,000 fewer farm inspections and a new single farm inspection taskforce is to be created by summer 2016, the prime minister added.
There would be a "streamlining" of the current regime, which sees seven regulators carrying out more than 125,000 inspections a year in England.
But the changes would not affect the way inspections are carried out in Wales.
Mr Cameron said: "I hope that the Welsh government also looks to do more to simplify inspections to benefit the industry and rural communities."
The Welsh government has been asked to comment.
A new food innovation network would also give more than 400 Welsh food businesses - and 8,000 in total - "access to the latest research"
The number of protected British foods is to be increased from 63 to 200, under the plans.
Record levels
Carmarthen Ham and Welsh Laverbread are among those expected to receive protected status later this summer, the prime minister said.
He said the status had helped create new jobs in Anglesey and "booming exports of Welsh lamb."
Environment Secretary Elizabeth Truss said: "We are supporting the industry to drive up exports to record levels so more of our fantastic British food and drink is on supermarket shelves, and in bars and restaurants, from Beijing to Bogota."
Welsh secretary Stephen Crabb said the global appetite for Welsh produce "has never been stronger".
Earlier, the prime minister released details of a £390m contract which will see Caerphilly county-based General Dynamics' take over a former fork-lift site in Merthyr Tydfil.
It follows a deal to buy 589 Scout Specialist Vehicles and will create 250 highly skilled jobs.