Author: vanesa

  • Letter from NGOs to Danish Fisheries Minister Karen Ellemann

    Letter from NGOs to Danish Fisheries Minister Karen Ellemann

     

    The following letter was sent to Denmark’s Minister for Fisheries and Equal Opportunities and Minister for Nordic Cooperation on February 21st, 2018.

    Download PDF Version of NGO letter to Minister Ellemann re LO monitoring and control

    Minister Karen Ellemann

    Minister for Fisheries and Equal Opportunities and Minister for Nordic Cooperation, Denmark

    Via email: flnminister@um.dk
    21 February 2018
    Re: Ending illegal, unreported discarding of fish by the Danish fishing industry

    Dear Minister Ellemann,

    We are writing to you to express our concern regarding the illegal and unreported discarding being carried out in the Baltic Sea by the Danish fishing fleet, as recently documented by scientists and NGOs, and reported by DR (1,2). We appreciate your acknowledgement of the problem, and we urge you to implement the solutions needed to reduce wasteful and illegal discarding, including significantly increasing at-sea monitoring and control.

    Discarding of fish not only wastes resources, it increases fishery costs, threatens endangered species, and impacts our food webs. The growing awareness of these threats to Europe’s oceans led to almost 900,000 people supporting a ban on discards during the reform of the Common Fisheries Policy, and motivated the European Parliament and the EU Council to legislate the Landing Obligation in 2013, in order to eliminate discards and drive change in fishing practices.

    The failure to properly enforce the discard ban in the Baltic Sea not only jeopardises the sustainability of fish stocks and undermines scientific advice, it introduces illegal activity into our fisheries. This must change: it is not acceptable for the fishing industry to continue to indulge in blatant law breaking, threatening the future of both our fisheries and those that depend on it for their livelihoods.

    Scientists and experts from countries with effective discard bans have recommended that EU member states substantially increase at-sea monitoring and control to ensure compliance of their fleet (3). However, following the Landing Obligation coming into force in the Baltic Sea, Denmark actually decreased at-sea inspections from 2015 to 2016 by ten per cent (4). Although widespread non-compliance with the landing obligation in the Baltic Sea is known by fisheries managers and control officers, just two fines were given for discarding in three years, demonstrating the inadequacy and dysfunctional nature of the current control system.

    Demersal trawlers and seines were responsible for 97% of discards of Eastern Baltic cod in 2016 (5), yet commercial adoption of selective gears has been slow. Denmark’s trawl industry has had three years to adapt to the introduction of the Landing Obligation in the Baltic Sea; the ongoing discarding equates to nothing less than wilful, illegal, unreported activity, and can no longer be brushed aside with excuses.

    The EU Control Regulation is currently under review and provides an opportunity to introduce the compulsory use of Remote Electronic Monitoring in the entire EU fleet, ensuring a fair playing field and improving compliance with the law.

    Denmark has been a leading developer of remote electronic monitoring (fully documented fisheries) projects in the past, and improvements in technology, decreases in costs, and its adoption by governments in other parts of the world means implementation is not only achievable, but likely to be more efficient and effective than current monitoring systems (6). It also enables vessels to demonstrate they are operating in accordance with best practice and improves data collection to support stock assessment and management decisions.

    Now, we believe the Danish government has an obligation and the opportunity to take the lead on ensuring that EU fisheries rules are respected by all stakeholders. We are confident that as the new Minister of Fisheries in Denmark you can drive better practices within our fisheries, and be an example for other European nations.

    We urge you to act now, so that Denmark can:

    1.  Ensure undersized fish are not caught in the first place, by requiring the use of more selective gear types;
    2. Implement proven, cost-effective monitoring onboard all vessels above 10m length and in segments with an increased risk of discarding (EFCA classification) in the Danish fishing fleet, e.g through the installation of Remote Electronic Monitoring (REM) and closed-circuit video surveillance;
    3. Increase inspections and control at sea; and
    4. Begin re-allocating quota to those in the fishing industry who have minimal impact, such as small-scale passive-gear fishers, and are complying with the law.

    We would welcome an opportunity to discuss these issues with you in further detail. To arrange a meeting, please contact Rebecca Hubbard, Our Fish.

    Yours sincerely,

    Rebecca Hubbard
    Program Director,Our Fish

    Birgitte Lesanner
    Head, Greenpeace Denmark

    Bo Øksnebjerg
    CEO, WWF DK

    Conrad Stralka
    Executive Director, BalticSea2020

    Jan Isakson
    Director
    Fisheries Secretariat

    Henning Mørk Jørgensen
    Water Policy Officer
    Danmarks Naturfredningsforening

    Erik Bjørn Olsen
    Seniorconsultant, Levende Hav

    Copies to:

    Ib Poulsen, Danish People’s Party
    Trine Torp, Socialistisk Folkeparti
    Simon Kollerup, Socialdemokratiet
    Andreas Steenberg, Medlemssekretær (RV)
    Ida Auken, Radikale Venstre
    Soren Egge Rasmussen, Enhedslisten
    Maria Reumert Gjerding, Enhedslisten
    Christian Poll, Alternativet

    Footnotes:
    1 https://www.dr.dk/nyheder/penge/forskere-fiskere-smider-ulovligt-1300-ton-torsk-ud

    2 Our Fish, 2017, Thrown Away: How illegal discarding in the Baltic Sea is failing EU fisheries and citizens. http://our.fish/publications/thrown-away-how-illegal-discarding-in-the-baltic-sea-is-failing-eu-fisheries-and-citizens/

    3 Agreed record of fisheries consultations between Norway and the European Union for 2018.
    https://ec.europa.eu/fisheries/sites/fisheries/files/2018-agreed-record-eu-norway-north-sea-12-2017.pdf

    4 Danish Agrifish Agency, 2016, Annual report on inspection of commercial and recreational fisheries 2016, Ministry of Environment and Food in Denmark.

    5 ICES, 2017. Report of the Baltic Fisheries Assessment Working Group (WGBFAS). ICES CM 2017/ACOM:11.

    6 WWF, 2017, Remote Electronic Monitoring: Why camera technology is a cost-effective and robust solution to improving UK fisheries management. https://www.wwf.org.uk/sites/default/files/2017- 10/Remote%20Electronic%20Monitoring%20in%20UK%20Fisheries%20Management_WWF.pdf

  • EU Parliament Votes to Ban Electric Pulse Fishing – Our Fish Response

    EU Parliament Votes to Ban Electric Pulse Fishing – Our Fish Response

    Brussels, 16 January 2018: – Responding to news that MEPs voted 402 to 232 for a prohibition on electric pulse fishing in European waters as part of Technical Measures Regulation, Our Fish Programme Director Rebecca Hubbard said:

    “Today’s vote by the European Parliament to stop the aggressive expansion of electric pulse fishing is a huge win for European seas, low impact fishers and the public. It also shows that new fishing methods must be studied on the basis of independent science before they can be pushed out for commercial use. Instead of developing another industrial fishery with high exploitation capacity, EU governments must get back to the urgent job of ending overfishing, and delivering truly sustainable fisheries management that benefits our marine ecosystems and coastal fishing communities.”

    Notes:

    French-based NGO BLOOM has led the campaign to end electric pulse fishing in Europe, with 18 NGOs and fishing groups. For more information see http://www.bloomassociation.org/en/media/blooms-press-releases/

    European Parliament press release: New fisheries rules: add a ban on electric pulse fishing, say MEPs

    See also: Electric fishing: new revelations on a European scandal

    Contacts

    Dave Walsh, Our Fish Communications Advisor, dave@our.fish +34 691826764
    Rebecca Hubbard, Our Fish Program Director, rebecca@our.fish +34 657669425

    About Our Fish

    Our Fish works to ensure European member states implement the Common Fisheries Policy and achieve sustainable fish stocks in European waters.

    Our Fish works with organisations and individuals across Europe to deliver a powerful and unwavering message: overfishing must be stopped, and solutions put in place that ensure Europe’s waters are fished sustainably. Our Fish demands that the Common Fisheries Policy be properly enforced, and Europe’s fisheries effectively governed.

    Our Fish calls on all EU Member States to set annual fishing limits at sustainable limits based on scientific advice, and to ensure that their fishing fleets prove that they are fishing sustainably, through monitoring and full documentation of their catch.

    http://our.fish

    Follow Our Fish on Twitter: @our_fish

  • Electric fishing: new revelations on a European scandal

    Electric fishing: new revelations on a European scandal

     

    8 January 2018: As the European Parliament prepares to vote on whether to restore the 1998 ban on electric fishing or to authorise its wide use throughout Europe, a group of NGOs and fisher organizations[1] have sent a joint letter to the European Commission revealing a compromising document, which questions the morality of its 2006 proposal to lift the ban on electric fishing.[i] The letter reveals that expert scientific advice to the Commission was blatantly ignored and requests the European Commission immediately withdraw all provisions concerning electric fishing from its legislative proposal on the Technical Measures Regulation,[ii] which will be voted by the European Parliament on 16 January 2018.

    Electric fishing consists of equipping trawl fishing nets with electrodes. When they are dragged along the seabed, an electrical current sends shocks into the sediment that cause a muscular convulsion in fish, forcing them out of the sand and into the fishing net. This indiscriminate fishing method enables the fishing industry to catch fish more easily, and to save on fuel, but at the cost of huge destruction to marine ecosystems, and to small-scale fisheries.

    In December 2006, the European Commission proposed to grant derogations allowing Member States to practice electric fishing, despite the 1998 prohibition to use destructive fishing methods such as fishing with explosives, poison or electric current. The EU Council immediately adopted the Commission’s proposal.[iii] The resulting Regulation[iv] justified this decision by referring to supposedly favourable scientific advice.[v] In this case, the scientific justification was of particular importance because the EU institutions were preparing to break their own law by lifting a ban. Electric fishing is widely recognized as destructive and has already been banned in most fishing nations throughout the world, including China.

    With no precise reference, locating the scientific advice among thousands of pages of scientific reports was virtually impossible, but BLOOM eventually found the document: a STECF (Scientific, Technical and Economic Committee for Fisheries) Report from 6–10 November 2006.[vi] Contrary to the December 2006 European Regulation, which considers that “fishing with beam trawl using electrical pulse current should be allowed“, the scientific advice dated one month earlier warns against “a number of issues that need to be resolved before any derogation can be granted“.[vii] Thus, not only has the scientific body of the European Commission never approved such derogations, but it even explicitly advised the European Commission against granting any. Under the pressure of Dutch fishing lobbies, the European Commission decided not only to ignore its own committee of experts but also to falsely claim scientific guidance in support of its decision to revoke the ban on electric fishing.

    This move and the Council decision to adopt the Commission’s proposal constitute a political scandal and a direct violation of the Code of Conduct for Commissioners[viii] which states that “The Members of the Commission must indeed discharge their duties in the general interest of the Union, without seeking nor taking instructions from any government or from any other body”. Whether it is the Commissioner or the Commission’s services that are responsible for this proposal and subsequent proposals to grant derogations is irrelevant: the Commission needs to act urgently to fix the problems it has thus created.

    Disastrous socio-economic and environmental consequences

    This dubious 2006 decision has had serious consequences for both marine ecosystems and humans. Not only is the seabed impacted by huge industrial nets but marine organisms are brutalized – electrocution causes fracture of the spine, bruising and burns. Artisanal fishers are direct victims of electric trawling. The platform for European artisanal fishermen “LIFE” (Low Impact Fishers of Europe) has gathered fisher testimonials online about the state of the marine environment after the passage of electric trawl nets. In the North of France, gillnetters are aware that the vote on 16 January will affect the very survival of many small fishing businesses.Haut du formulaire While artisanal gillnetters generate a maximum fish discard rate of 6%,[ix] they are penalised by European institutions that, against all objectives of the Common Fisheries Policy, favour electric trawling even though it generates 10 times more discards (50-70%).[x]

    But that’s not all.

    A political and financial scandal

    The 2006 Commission and Council decision also has very serious financial implications. By giving a hitherto prohibited, destructive fishing method the status of “experimental”[xi] and “innovative”[xii] fishing, the Dutch industrial lobbies have been able to claim millions of euros of public money to equip their beam trawl fleet with electrodes. A simple semantic shift has allowed massive public funding for one of the least-sustainable fishing methods.

    Missing critical pieces

    As things stand, the scale of the financial scandal cannot be fully grasped because the Netherlands fails to publish the file of public subsidies allocated from 2007 to 2014,[xiii] making it impossible to calculate the total subsidies granted to electric fishing since the introduction of derogations. However, BLOOM has managed to estimate the subsidies allocated since August 2015. In just over two years, at least 5.7 million euros of public subsidies have been allocated for the development of industrial electric fishing fleets in the Netherlands, of which 3.8 million euros come from European funds (67% of the total).[xiv] These public subsidies have been allocated under the titles of “research”, “innovation” and “best practices”.

    Also missing is an answer from the European Commission to the complaint that BLOOM filed against the Netherlands about the illegal allocation of licences by Dutch authorities (much higher than regulatory thresholds). How are Members of the European Parliament supposed to decide on a dossier when crucial elements are not disclosed by European institutions?

    In every aspect, electric fishing shames Europe.

    Fishermen and NGOs demand urgent action

    On the basis of these revelations, the undersigned organizations[2] sent a formal letter to the European Commission calling the December 2006 decision to lift the ban on electric fishing in Europe “arbitrary, harmful and illegitimate”. They ask the European Commission to expeditiously withdraw all provisions relative to electric ‘pulse’ fishing from its legislative proposal on the “Technical Measures” Regulation, which was addressed to the European Parliament and Council.

    Today, the Commission does not have to stand by a past, unacceptable and immoral arbitration. Removing all references to electric fishing in its legislative proposal is the only way to give credibility to European institutions and to implement the objectives of the Common Fisheries Policy and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, to which the European Union has fully subscribed.

    The European Commission has a duty to repair the problems it has created.

    ***

    Haut du formulaire

    On 10 January 2018, BLOOM will co-host an event at the European Parliament entitled: “Electric Fishing: The European Exception”

    Press conference: 9-9.30 (News Room ASP “Anna Politkovskaya”)

    Surprise “Artivist” performance: 9.45 am in front of Forum Bar on 3rd Floor (Altiero Spinelli Building)

    Multi-stakeholder Press Conference: 10-12.30 (Room ASP 01G3)

    For Parliament press accreditation, click here: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/fr/press-room/accreditation

    More information

    For more information, read “Electric ‘Pulse’ Fishing: Why It Should Be Banned

    To understand the detailed construction of European law on electric fishing, read this page.

    To learn more about electric fishing, visit this page
    BLOOM’s European petition asking MEPs to definitively ban electric fishing in Europe.

     

    MEDIA CONTACTS (languages spoken in brackets)

    BLOOM

    Claire Nouvian (French – English – Spanish) – Chair and Founder
    Frédéric Le Manach (French – English) Scientific Director
    Inès de Agueda (Spanish)
    Domitilla Senni (Italian)
    Contact Bloom Association: https://www.bloomassociation.org/en/contact/

    LOW IMPACT FISHERS OF EUROPE (LIFE)

    Jerry Percy (English) Director, +44 1437 751242 or +44 7799 698 568 director@lifeplatform.eu

    IRISH ISLANDS MARINE RESOURCE ORGANISATION (IIMRO)

    Jerry Early (English) Chair, +35 3878 054 246 jerry@iimro.org

    THE COMMUNITY OF ARRAN SEABED TRUST (COAST)

    Howard Wood OBE (English) Spokesperson, +44 1770 700466 howard@arrancoast.com

    GILLNET FISHERS OF THE NORTH OF FRANCE (French only)
    Stéphane Pinto (French) Representative of gillnetters of the “Hauts de France” Region, +33 (0) 6 11 96 09 74
    Frédéric Drogerys (French) Representative of the port of Dunkerque, +33 (0) 6 86 76 28 82 

    PLATEFORME DE LA PETITE PECHE ARTISANALE

    Ken Kawahara (French) spokesperson, +33 6 25 10 32 95 ken.kawahara@plateforme-petite-peche.fr

    UK FISHERS (English)

    Lowestoft Fish Market Alliance

    Paul Lines +44 (0)7860 518 908 paulenviroserve@btinternet.com

    Thanet fishermen / Queenbourgh fishermen

    Tom Brown +44 (0)1843 594 223 Thbtfa@gmail.com

    Fishermen United

    James White +44 (0)7799 552 355 Jwhite283@googlemail.com

     

    Leigh and Southend fishermen

    Daryl Godbold +44 (0)1702 554 543

    Mersea Island Fishermen 

    Andrew Craig + 44 (0)7977 514 069

    Info@designcatamarans.com

    IRISH WILDLIFE TRUST

    Pádraic Fogerty (English) Campaign officer, 087-2959811; 01-8236145

    irishwildlife@iwt.ie

    THE BLACK FISH

    Valeska Diemel (German) Germany Director, +49 157 300 869 53 valeska@theblackfish.org

    END ECOCIDE ON EARTH

    Valérie Cabanes (French), spokesperson, +33 (0)6 89 85 28 70 (via WhatsApp) valerie@endecocide.eu 

    NOTRE AFFAIRE A TOUS

    Marie Toussaint (French), Chair, +33 6 42 00 88 68 (via WhatsApp) mariev.toussaint@gmail.com

    OUR FISH

    Rebecca Hubbard (English), Program Director, +34 657 669 425 rebecca@our.fish 

    BLUE MARINE FOUNDATION

    *** 

    Haut du formulaire

    [1] BLOOM, End Ecocide on Earth, the Irish Wildlife Trust, Blue Marine Foundation, the Community of Arran Seabed Trust (COAST), the Black Fish, Our Fish, Notre Affaire à Tous, Low Impact Fishers of Europe (LIFE), Gillnet Fishers of the North of France, Thanet Fishermen, Queenbourgh Fishermen, Leigh and Southend Fishermen, Mersea Island Fishermen, Lowestoft Fish Market Alliance, Irish Islands Marine Resource Organisation (IIMRO), Plateforme Petite Pêche Artisanale Française, Fishermen United.

    [2]

    Notes and references:

     

    [i] Electric fishing has been banned in Europe since 1998 by Article 31 of Council regulation (EC) No 850/98.

    [ii] On 11 March 2016, the European Commission released its legislative proposal to reform the Technical Measures Regulation (COM(2016) 134 final).

    [iii] Important note: the decision to grant derogations came through as part of a TAC and quota Regulation in which it had absolutely nothing to do. See http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32007R0041&from=EN

    [iv] Council Regulation (EC) No 41/2007.

    [v]In the light of advice from STECF, fishing with beam trawl using electrical pulse current should be allowed in ICES zones IVc and IVb south under certain conditions” (Council Regulation (EC) No 41/2007). The STECF (Scientific, Technical and Economic Committee for Fisheries) is the scientific body of the European Commission that is supposed to help the latter implementing the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) of the EU.

    [vi] STECF (2006) 23rd Report of the Scientific, Technical and Economic Committee for Fisheries (Second Plenary Meeting), Barza d’Ispra, 6-10 November 2006. Available at: https://stecf.jrc.ec.europa.eu/documents/43805/99464/2006-11_23rd+report+of+the+STECF.pdf

    [vii] The STECF concludes that “although the development of this technology should not be halted, there are a number of issues that need to be resolved before any derogation can be granted” (page 59, STECF 2006). Noteworthy, a Dutch researcher was an active relay of the demands of the Dutch industrial lobbies within the STECF. The minutes of the meetings show the zeal of the latter in favour of electric trawls: “[He] disagreed with the recommendation made to limit the use of electro-trawls to one vessel. He also asked for a list of topics to address in further work and a definition of the conditions under which a positive recommendation for introducing the technology in the beam trawl fleet might be made” (2006 report of the ICES-FAO working group on fishing technology and fish (WGFTFB), CM 2006 / FTC: 06, page 7). This intense lobbying probably explains the incongruous mention in the official opinion of the STECF, which says that: “the development of this technology [electric fishing] should not be halted“.

    [viii] https://ec.europa.eu/info/sites/info/files/code-of-conduct-for-commissioners_april2011_en.pdf

    [ix] Kelleher (2005) Discards in the world’s marine fisheries: an update. Fisheries Technical Paper 470, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Rome (Italy). 152 p.

    [x] See Cappell et al. (2016) MSC sustainable fisheries certification — Off-site surveillance visit — CVO pulse sole and plaice fishery — Public comment draft report. Acoura Marine Ltd, Edinburgh (UK). 261 p. Also see Baarseen et al. (2015) Verkenning economic impact aanlandplicht op Nederlandse kottervloot. Flynth & LEI Wageningen UR. 69 p.

    [xi] While 22 derogations were granted at the end of 2006, Dutch fishers secured 20 additional licenses in 2010 via the Council, specifically under the guise of scientific research (using Article 43 of Council Regulation (EC) No 850/98).

    [xii] Due to a strong demand by the Dutch and thanks to the help of Commissioner Damanaki, 42 additional licenses were granted again in 2014 as part of a pilot project to reduce bycatch/discards (using Article 14 of Regulation (EU) No 1380/2013). For more details, see Kraan et al. (2015) Perceptions of European stakeholders of pulse fishing. Report number C098/15, IMARES Wageningen UR, IJmuiden (The Netherlands). 44 p. See page 7.

    [xiii] Under the “European Fisheries Fund” (EFF).

    [xiv] Data from the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF) for the period 2015-2020. Available at: http://www.rvo.nl/sites/default/files/2017/05/20170430_Openbaarmaking_EFMZV_2_v1.csv