A Field of Oilseed Rape Flowers near Denton.
The fields of the UK seem to have a lot of oilseed rape in them this year. Why? http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-18249840 ( old article but still valid )
Travelling up and down the railways and motorways of the UK in recent weeks, it seems like the surrounding fields are yellower than ever.
The bright dandelion-yellow flowers of oilseed rape have been a familiar sight across farmland in spring across the country for years.
But now experts say farmers are growing more than ever before.
The boom is being driven by rocketing prices as it becomes more desirable for food, and other producers in Europe suffer the effects of bad weather.
Dr Fiona Burnett, a plant
pathologist at the Scottish Agricultural College, says rapeseed oil has
historically fulfilled a useful role as a "break crop" in farm rotation -
to suppress weeds and improve soil quality - for cereal crops such as
wheat and barley.
But whereas in the past the crop has been largely functional -
and has not made farmers much money - in recent years it has become
hugely profitable, she says. "Forward prices for the current crop are as high as £388 per tonne, which compares to £240 in 2010, which is a huge rise in profitability."
When compared with the profit on other break crops such as beans, "using rapeseed oil is a no-brainer", she adds.
Burnett says around 698,000 hectares in England and Wales and around 37,000 hectares in Scotland have been sown with oilseed rape this year, up about 6% on last year, according to the Home Grown Cereal association survey.
It is easy to see why farmers would change to crops that fill their pockets, but what is driving demand?
Guy Gagen, chief arable adviser at the National Farmers Union, says rapeseed oil is actually one of the highest quality vegetable oils, and it has gained a certain culinary respectability over recent years.
A part of BBC News Magazine, Who, What, Why? aims to answer questions behind the headlines
"It's being used as mayonnaise,
in margarine, salads, anywhere vegetables are used. It has a good health
profile, has low saturated fat, is high in omega-3, and some claim it
is better than sunflower oil," he says.
The oil also has some high profile fans, with chefs James
Martin and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall said to be converts to the
rapeseed revolution.The UK's "consistently high yields" of rapeseed have made the crop a success, according to Gagen.
"Our rape crops are in extremely good condition. Other places like Germany, Poland and Ukraine have had a dreadful winter, the crops were exposed to severe cold temperatures, I suspect the French suffered as well.
"Rapeseed oil is one of the highest yield oils - it has very black seeds, which are like poppy seeds, and they are 45% oil - and the other 55% is high protein animal feed - they are an amazing piece of nature," he says.
Burnett says oilseed rape is also being used for biodiesel, while a very small amount has specialist industrial uses, for instance as lubricants.
There is also a rise in "quality" markets - with "cold pressed" oils such as Glendaveny, Ola Oils and Border Fields on the rise, she adds.
Of course, economics and nutrition aside, it's not to everybody's taste on a purely aesthetic basis.
For some, endless fields of yellow disrupt traditional British landscapes.
However fans of England's green and pleasant land should not despair. Burnett says oilseed rape has probably been more visible this year because it has flowered for almost twice its normal length of time - eight weeks, instead of four - as a cold and wet April and May stopped flowers developing and dying at their normal rate.
And hay fever sufferers should take some comfort from a recent medical research council Institute for Environmental Health report into its allergenicity.
"[It] has a large pollen grain but it doesn't move very far. To get serious amount of pollen from rapeseed oil you'd have to actually walk through the crops," says Gagen.
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