Author: Dave Walsh

  • Rebecca Hubbard: How EU decisions affect fish, the ocean and life on earth

    Rebecca Hubbard: How EU decisions affect fish, the ocean and life on earth

    How EU decisions affect fish, the ocean and life on earth

     

    Published by Open Access Government, October 17th, 2019:

    Rebecca Hubbard, Programme Director of the Our Fish campaign, reveals precisely how EU decisions affect fish, the ocean and life on earth

    Europe’s seas are home to some of the world’s most productive fisheries, and the European Union (EU) is the world’s largest trader of seafood products. (1) What we do with fish matters; as well as providing food and jobs for the fishing industry – fish keep our marine ecosystems functioning. Fish and marine life are the engines of our global ocean, the ocean that supplies us with every second breath drives our climate and has absorbed 90% of the excess heat produced from accelerated climate change. You could say the ocean is the heart and lungs of the planet. So with fish populations coming under severe pressure from both climate change and overfishing, the question arises – by ending one problem, can the other be alleviated? And can we do it fast enough to make a difference?

    The EU has long acknowledged its overfishing problem and member governments have committed to putting an end to it. Yet fish populations continue to be fished far beyond what scientists advise – and at the last count, some 1.7 million tonnes of ‘unwanted’ fish were being discarded at sea dead or dying every year – wasted.

    This is clearly absurd. Back in 2013, hundreds of thousands of people around Europe thought so too and demanded an end to overfishing and discarding. Following pressure from civil society, industry and politicians, EU governments agreed to reform the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) to end overfishing by 2015, or by 2020 at the latest.

    A great deal of backslapping followed as ministers congratulated themselves on a job well done. But with commitment, action is required; 2015 is long past – and with 2020 fast approaching, EU Member States continue overfishing, treating our seas as a resource to be mined, rather than an ecosystem that supports life on our planet and a collectively-owned public good for the benefit of all citizens, now and in the future.

    As a result, many EU fish populations are being fished beyond what scientists advise is sustainable. In April 2019, a report of the EU’s own scientific experts(2) found that 41% of assessed populations in the Northeast Atlantic were still subject to overfishing in 2017 and 37% of stocks were still outside safe biological limits. In the Mediterranean, around 90% of fish populations are overfished.

    At last December’s AGRIFISH Council in Brussels, an annual gathering where EU fishing quotas are horse-traded during closed-door, all-night sessions, fisheries ministers agreed to quotas a whopping 300,000 tonnes above scientific advice for the North-East Atlantic in 2019 – increasing overfishing by 10% on the previous year.

    Good, publicly-funded scientific advice is placed on ministers’ desks, but when it comes to the crunch, long-term social, financial and ecological thinking is cast aside in favour of short term profit or political deals. The situation often worsens the following year, when scientists advise even bigger cuts to quotas – because previous decisions have worsened the health of the fish populations – creating a negative feedback loop that spirals downwards.

    To make matters worse, discarding of unwanted fish at sea has not stopped; the massive waste of fish through bycatch continues and improvements in fishing selectivity and catch documentation anticipated by the reformed CFP has not eventuated. Many believe this is largely because there is virtually no policing of fishing vessels at sea and without monitoring and enforcement, the rules are simply being ignored. With stories of widespread illegal and unreported catches emerging, Our Fish has launched Fishyleaks.eu, to provide a secure and anonymous website for reporting infringements.

    Does it have to be this way? Of course not. Will it take a long time to change? No. During two EU Council meetings of two days each and one week of negotiations with Norway, the EU sets its annual fishing limits. Member States can end overfishing by 2020 (as law demands), by simply following scientific advice. And they can enforce the ban on discards by introducing Remote Electronic Monitoring on fishing vessels (CCTV in working areas) to verify that what they are catching and reporting, reflects the fish that are being brought ashore.

    Is overfishing the only threat to the ocean? Certainly not. But besides the rapidly worsening impacts of climate change, it is still considered the greatest. Can removing one help the other? A new paper from scientists at the University of British Columbia, released on 2nd September and commissioned by Our Fish, finds that one of the clearest pathways to building ocean resilience in the face of climate change is to end overfishing.

    The paper finds that overfishing severely weakens the health of the ocean. So when climate change hits, the ability of the ocean (and its wildlife and fish populations) to withstand that extra impact, is severely undermined. But scientists have found that by removing the pressure of overfishing, fish species have a drastically increased chance of survival. Combined with the fact that fish help sink carbon in the ocean and reducing extra boats will achieve a more profitable and sustainable carrying capacity, it means ending overfishing will also capture more carbon and reduce emissions.(3)

    It’s time to sink or swim. The EU and a number of Member States have begun to acknowledge the state of the climate crisis. They are debating a target of net-zero emissions by 2050 and talking about new Green Deals which will prioritise action that pulls back the runaway climate change train and saves nature for our children.

    But if the EU is going to do this, it needs to put the ocean at the heart of any climate action plan – because the ocean is the heart and lungs of the planet. And we are going to need many tools and strategies, including those that can be practically delivered immediately. Not only does ending overfishing rebuild marine life and deliver on EU fisheries law, but it is also instrumental in bolstering ocean resilience in the face of dangerous climate change. Ending overfishing is emergency climate action and it’s time the EU slams on the brakes.

    References

    1 EUMOFA, 2016. The EU fish Market 2016 edition. European Market Observatory for Fisheries and Aquaculture Products. www.eumofa.eu

    2 Scientific, Technical and Economic Committee for Fisheries (STECF), 2019. Monitoring the performance of the Common Fisheries Policy.

    3 U. Rashid Sumaila and Travis C. Tai, 2019. Working Paper #2019-05, Ending overfishing can mitigate impacts of climate change. Fisheries Economics Research Unit, Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries & School of Public Policy and Global Affairs, the University of British Columbia.

  • Our Ocean Oslo: Aperitivo Hour with Dr Rashid Sumaila on overfishing, ocean health and climate action

    Our Ocean Oslo: Aperitivo Hour with Dr Rashid Sumaila on overfishing, ocean health and climate action

    Ending Overfishing is Climate Action!

    The recent IPCC Special Report on Oceans and Cryosphere gave stark warnings for the ocean and made clear the need for immediate and significant action on climate change. Ending greenhouse gas emissions is the clear priority.

    However, there is an ocean of solutions. And Rashid Sumaila has one of them. What is putting the ocean under as much, or even more, pressure than climate change? What could we end in a fraction of the time it will take for emissions to abate? “You know what it is … overfishing”.

    Ending overfishing, especially in the EU, is a pre-existing commitment. In 2013 the EU agreed to end overfishing by 2020, and all the indications are that it will lead to an increase in fish stocks and the viability of the sector. A no-brainer.

    Join Professor Sumaila presenting, not rapping, his latest paper on how ending overfishing could improve ocean health in the face of climate change:

    17.00-18.00, Tuesday October 22
    Amerikalinjen, Pier42 bar
    Jernbanetorget 2
    0154
    Oslo

    Map

    Please register your interest in attending to admin@our.fish by Sunday 20 October

    More details on Our Ocean website.

    Further reading: Ending Overfishing Is Opportunity to Combat Climate Crisis – Report

  • Borsen: Nye Østersø-kvoter for sild og torsk giver stærke reaktioner: “Ikke godt nok” og “et sort kapitel”

    Borsen: Nye Østersø-kvoter for sild og torsk giver stærke reaktioner: “Ikke godt nok” og “et sort kapitel”

    Nye Østersø-kvoter for sild og torsk giver stærke reaktioner: "Ikke godt nok" og "et sort kapitel"

     

    “Ikke godt nok” og “et sort kapitel” lyder nogle af reaktionerne, efter at Østersøens skeri- og fødevareministre er nå

    til enighed om nye kvoter for næste år.

    Der blev forhandlet i Luxembourg til efter midnat, før ministrene nåede en aftale, som reducerer kvoterne for bla. sil og torsk.

    Blandt de kvoter, der har størst betydning for dansk skeri, reduceres torskekvoten i den vestlige Østersø med 60 pct. og sildekvoten i samme område med 65 pct. Og EU-kommissionen havde på forhånd lagt op til en endnu større reduktion på hhv 68 og 71 pct. – baseret på biologisk rådgivning, der hvert år fastsætter en ramme for kvoterne.

    På den modsatte øj er der heller ingen jubel hos Berit Asmussen, kampganeleder i organisationen Our Fish, som fulgte forhandlingerne i Luxembourg sammen med andre NGO’er fra Østersølandene.

    “Ikke godt nok,” lyder hendes korte reaktion: “Mogens Jensen og de øvrige ministre forsøger at lave et kompromis mellem et realistisk og videnskabeligt bud på risikoen for, at nogle af skearterne crasher – og så nogle interesser, som gerne vil ske mere her og nu. Men hele den tilgang er uforståelig og kortsigtet. Enten så crasher arterne eller også gør de ikke,” siger Asmussen.

  • Euractiv:  EU Council follows Commission’s line, trims Baltic fishing quota

    Euractiv: EU Council follows Commission’s line, trims Baltic fishing quota

     EU Council follows Commission’s line, trims Baltic fishing quota

    Euractiv, 15 October 2019:

    EU ministers have clinched a midnight deal in Luxembourg on the fishing quota limit in the Baltic Sea for 2020, following the Commission’s proposal to decrease the total allowable catches (TACs) for eight out of ten most commercially important fish stocks in the basin.

    Fisheries ministers gathered in the Agrifish Council on Monday (14 October) to decide how much fish Baltic fishermen are allowed to catch and under what conditions.

    This year, the Council agreed to increase the quota only for herring in the Gulf of Riga by 11% and to keep the same level of catches for salmon in the Gulf of Finland, curbing fishing other opportunities for other stocks though.

    In particular, catch limits for the Western Baltic cod were cut by 60% in order to have the stock no longer under risk of collapse in 2023, while the ban on fishing Eastern Baltic cod was substantially confirmed as only 2,000 tonnes of unavoidable by-catches were allowed.

    The fishing quota for Eastern Baltic cod stock has been reduced each year since 2014 to just over 24,000 tonnes in 2019 and in July the Commission took emergency measures to rebuild the stock, banning its commercial fishing until 31 December 2019.

    ..

    “With less than three months until the EU’s own deadline to end overfishing, fisheries ministers are repeating the same destructive overfishing again and again, but apparently expecting a different result. That’s one definition of insanity,” was the comment of Rebecca Hubbard, programme director for Our Fish.


    EU Council follows Commission’s line, trims Baltic fishing quota

  • EU-Fischereiminister ignorieren ihre rechtliche Verpflichtung und die Grenzen der Natur in der Ostsee

    EU-Fischereiminister ignorieren ihre rechtliche Verpflichtung und die Grenzen der Natur in der Ostsee

    The Baltic Sea is in Crisis. Why are you still overfishing? Light projection outside Agrifish meeting.

     

    Photo & video: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/a7koeg47tptt0gi/AACZhLz-zJuD-EtsgstYfCvua?dl=0

    Beschlossene Fangquoten für Ostsee verschärfen Überfischung – Dorsch- und Heringspopulationen sind in kritischem Zustand – Wissenschaftler empfehlen Null-Quote für westlichen Hering und östlichen Dorsch – Gemeinsame Fischereipolitik schreibt Ende der Überfischung ab 2020 vor – Deutsche Umwelthilfe und Our Fish kritisieren Entscheidung als verantwortungslos

    Die EU-Fischereiminister haben sich heute in den frühen Morgenstunden darauf geeinigt, die Überfischung für fünf von zehn Fischbestände in der Ostsee in 2020 weiterzuführen. Die Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH) und die Initiative Our Fish bewerten die Entscheidung als verantwortungs- und rücksichtslos angesichts des ohnehin kritischen Zustands der Fischpopulationen in der Ostsee. Die EU-Mitgliedstaaten verstoßen mit der Fortführung der Überfischung gegen die rechtlich bindende Frist der Gemeinsamen Fischereipolitik (GFP), die Überfischung in den europäischen Gewässern bis spätestens 2020 zu beenden.

    Der AGRIFISH-Ministerrat setzt die Fangmengen für den westlichen Hering, den östlichen Dorsch, die Sprotte sowie die Lachspopulationen in der Ostsee im nächsten Jahr über die wissenschaftlichen Empfehlungen fest. Für den westlichen Hering und den östlichen Dorsch empfehlen Wissenschaftler eine Null-Quote für 2020, das heißt einen Fangstopp. Gemäß Entscheidung der EU-Minister dürfen stattdessen 2651 Tonnen westlicher Hering und 2000 Tonnen östlicher Dorsch in 2020 gefangen werden.

    “Statt den schwindenden Fischpopulationen in der Ostsee durch ein Aussetzen der Fischerei eine Chance zur Erholung zu geben, verringern die Minister mit ihren viel zu hohen Fangquoten die Überlebenswahrscheinlichkeit der sich in kritischen Zustand befindenden Dorsch- und Heringspopulationen. Die beschlossenen Fangmengen stehen nicht im Einklang mit den gesetzlichen Vorgaben. Vor allem die Dorschbestände werden durch illegale Fischrückwürfe zusätzlich bedroht. Jeder muss sich an die Gesetze halten. So auch die Fischereiminister”, sagt Sascha Müller-Kraenner, Bundesgeschäftsführer der DUH.

    Rebecca Hubbard, Direktorin der Our Fish-Initiative dazu: “Es ist erschreckend, dass der Ministerrat sich über die rechtliche Verpflichtung hinwegsetzt und für fünf von zehn Fischpopulationen zu hohe Fanggrenzen festlegt. Die Mitgliedstaaten hätten in diesem Jahr die Überfischung beenden müssen. Angesichts der Klima- und Biodiversitätskrise, die in der Ostsee bereits ihre Auswirkungen zeigt, sind die getroffenen Entscheidungen unverantwortlich.”

    Links:

       - Einigung des Ministerrates über Fangbeschränkungen für 2020 in 
         der Ostsee: http://ots.de/TFF73L
       - Gemeinsame Empfehlungen der NGOs über Fangbeschränkungen für 
         2020 in der Ostsee: http://ots.de/0NAwuj
       - Link zu Kommissionsvorschlag: http://ots.de/GC2LUE

    Pressekontakt:

    Sascha Müller-Kraenner, Bundesgeschäftsführer DUH
    0160 90354509, mueller-kraenner@duh.de

    Rebecca Hubbard, Programmdirektorin Our Fish
    +34 657669425, rebecca@our.fish

    Katja Hockun, Projektmanagerin Meeresnaturschutz DUH
    030 2400867-895, hockun@duh.de

    DUH-Pressestelle:

    Ann-Kathrin Marggraf, Marlen Bachmann
    030 2400867-20, presse@duh.de

    www.duh.de, www.twitter.com/umwelthilfe,
    www.facebook.com/umwelthilfe, www.instagram.com/umwelthilfe

     

  • Atlas of the Future: Fishyleaks website exposes fishy business

    Atlas of the Future: Fishyleaks website exposes fishy business

     

    Via Atlas of the Future:

    The excellently-named Fishyleaks has been created by the Our Fish campaign to end “rampant” overfishing and illegal, unreported fishing activity in EU waters.

    Our Fish believes that Europe’s fisheries are a common resource, for the benefit of all citizens, that should be managed sustainably and legally to ensure the future of coastal communities, food security and ocean health in the face of the climate crisis. The Fishyleaks platform is for people who witness activity that undermines these important aspirations, so that they can share that information, while minimising risk to themselves.

    “The positive reception that Fishyleaks has received so far has been impressive. It seems clear that people in the marine science sector and within the policy field – both EU and national – think that the creation of Fishyleaks is a good thing. Now we need to wait and see what reports arrive”.

    Read more on Atlas of the Future:

    Visit Fishyleaks

  • EU Reporter: More garbage caught than cod: NGOs call for emergency measures to protect  Eastern Baltic Cod

    EU Reporter: More garbage caught than cod: NGOs call for emergency measures to protect Eastern Baltic Cod

    More garbage caught than cod: NGOs call for emergency measures to protect #EasternBalticCod

    EU Reporter 22 February 2019: More garbage caught than cod: NGOs call for emergency measures to protect Eastern Baltic Cod

    NGOs in the Baltic Sea Region have sent an urgent letter to the European Commissioner in charge of Environment Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, Karmenu Vella, urging him to implement emergency measures in accordance with article 12 of the EU Common Fisheries Policy to protect what little remains of the eastern Baltic cod stock.

    This stock has shown signs of crisis for many years. The latest information suggests the situation is now critical. On 29 January 2019, in a Baltic Sea Advisory Council meeting focusing on the eastern Baltic cod stock, the latest data from the Baltic International Trawl surveys was presented. Survey trawls were reported to have caught more garbage than cod.

     

     

  • Undercurrent: NGOs call for six-month moratorium on fishing Baltic cod

    Undercurrent: NGOs call for six-month moratorium on fishing Baltic cod

    NGOs call for six-month moratorium on fishing Baltic cod

    Undercurrent, 22 February 2019: NGOs call for six-month moratorium on fishing Baltic cod

    Three NGOs in the Baltic Sea region have sent a letter to the European Commissioner of maritime affairs and fisheries, Karmenu Vella, requesting that emergency measures be taken to protect what remains of the eastern Baltic cod stock.

    The NGOs Ocean, Coalition Clean Baltic and Our Fish called upon the European Commission to immediately suspend all fishing for eastern Baltic cod for six months until the latest scientific assessment can be completed.

  • More garbage caught than cod: NGOs call for emergency measures to protect Eastern Baltic cod

    More garbage caught than cod: NGOs call for emergency measures to protect Eastern Baltic cod

    Media release | Thursday 21th February 2019

    NGOs in the Baltic Sea Region have sent an urgent letter to the European Commissioner in charge of Environment Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, Karmenu Vella, urging him to implement emergency measures in accordance with article 12[1] of the EU Common Fisheries Policy to protect what little remains of the eastern Baltic cod stock.

    This stock has shown signs of crisis for many years. The latest information suggests the situation is now critical. On 29th January 2019, in a Baltic Sea Advisory Council meeting focusing on the eastern Baltic cod stock, the latest data from the Baltic International Trawl surveys was presented. Survey trawls were reported to have caught more garbage than cod.

    An International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) benchmark meeting was held for the stock from 4-8th February to determine if an analytical assessment of the stock could now be made[2]. The report from that process is due mid-March, however the full cycle of the normal Baltic fish stock science assessment process does not conclude until the end of May.

    The NGOs (Ocean, Coalition Clean Baltic and Our Fish) said collectively.  “We implore the Commission to act now before further unsustainable fishing takes place on what very little remains of the eastern Baltic cod.”

    The NGOs have urged the Commission to immediately suspend fishing for eastern Baltic cod for the next 6 months while the latest scientific findings are examined and to take immediate action to move at least a portion of the sprat fishery away from Baltic sub-divisions 25 and 26 to maximize the availability of prey for the cod.[3]

    Link to joint NGO letter: Crisis situation for the Eastern Baltic cod stock – emergency measures needed now

    For more information please contact:

    Nils Höglund, Fisheries Policy Officer at Coalition Clean Baltic
    nils.hoglund@ccb.se Tel: +46 70-867 92 49 (Languages: English and Swedish)

    Andrzej Białaś, Policy Advisor at Oceana in Europe
    abialas@oceana.org Tel: +48 501 58 88 33 (Languages: English and Polish)

    Cathrine Pedersen Schirmer, Coordinator for Denmark at Our Fish
    cathrine@our.fish Tel: +45 2197 7905 (Languages: English and Danish)

     

    [1] Article 12 of the EU Common Fisheries Policy allows the Commission to adopt immediately applicable implementing acts applicable for a maximum period of six months measures in case of a serious threat to marine biological resources. https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex%3A32013R1380

    [2] What is an ICES Benchmark meeting:

    https://www.ices.dk/community/advisory-process/Pages/Benchmarks.aspx

    [3] Marie Storr-Paulsen, DTU Aqua: information from the latest survey:

    http://www.bsac.dk/getattachment/Meetings/BSAC-meetings/BSAC-Executive-Committee-meeting-(4)/BSAC_new-surveyMSP-(1).pdf.aspx?lang=en-GB