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EU fishing reform deal could replenish stocks

May 31, 2013 · 

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Agreement may see EU fish stocks rise by up to 15 million tonnes by the end of decade.

The European Union has agreed to put an end to decades of over-fishing and rebuild dwindling stocks by 2020, as part of a deal to overhaul the union’s fisheries policy.


The agreement will put an end to annual haggling over catch quotas by EU ministers in Brussels, widely blamed for putting short-term economic interests above the long-term health of Europe’s fish stocks.


Officials said a deal to follow scientific advice more closely when setting quotas in the future could increase EU fish stocks by up to 15 million tonnes by the end of the decade.


The reform will also see a massive reduction in the wasteful practice known as discarding, which sees European fishermen throw almost 2 million tonnes of unwanted fish back into the sea each year – often dead or dying – as they seek to fill strict quotas with the most valuable species.


In a statement after the deal, British liberal MEP and head of the European Parliament’s “Fish for the Future” group
Chris Davies described it as a major step in promoting sustainable fishing.


“Our treatment of Europe’s seas has been a disgrace. But we have learnt lessons. Across
Europe there is a strong desire now to listen to the scientists, rebuild fish stocks, cut discards, and give our fishing industry a better future,” he said.


The bloc’s roughly ¤1 billion common fisheries policy has been blamed for driving decades of over-fishing, with generous subsidies leading to a massive over capacity in the fishing fleet.


As a result, the Commission estimates that 75 per cent of European fish stocks are currently over-fished, compared with 25 per cent worldwide.
As part of the deal, EU fishing nations will have to reduce the size of their fleets to reflect their overall quotas or face the loss of some subsidies.
The deal must now be rubber-stamped by EU governments and the full
European Parliament before entering force next year, but the details are unlikely to change.

Europe had the third-highest fish catches globally behind China and Indonesia in 2010, the most recent data from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization showed.  Europe’s top fishing nations are Denmark, Spain, Britain and France, which together account for about half of all EU catches.
Reuters

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