Category: Press

  • Spanish Street Artists Call For Ocean Action from EU Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevičius

    Spanish Street Artists Call For Ocean Action from EU Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevičius

    Boa Mistura creating the mural "Heartbeat of the Ocean" in Vilnius.
    Boa Mistura creating the mural “Heartbeat of the Ocean” in Vilnius.

    Brussels 3 February 2022:- A collective of Madrid-based street artists have published an open letter to EU Commissioner for the Environment, Oceans and Fisheries, Virginijus Sinkevičius calling on him to take the lead in ending EU destructive and over-fishing and restore the health of the ocean.

    The letter from Boa Mistura follows their creation of a nine-floor high mural in the Commissioner’s hometown of Vilnius in November, titled Heartbeat of the Ocean. The mural, commissioned by the Our Fish campaign, features a direct message to the Commissioner: “Save the Ocean to Save the Climate”.

    “The mural of sea creatures in Vilnius shows and celebrates the Ocean as the heart of the planet. Without a healthy ocean, we cannot have a healthy planet – no heart, no life. Our mural in Vilnius is our message to the world: ‘Save the Ocean to Save the Climate’”, said Pablo Puróne of Boa Mistura.

    “Our name, Boa Mistura – which means ‘good mixture’, reflects our diverse backgrounds and pathways. We have created massive outdoor artworks all over the world to bring beauty and a message to our streets and connect people.”

    “The mural depicts whales, fish, and other ocean creatures with hands supporting them to express the love and respect humans should have for oceans. It is not only a gift to the people of Vilnius, but to all people. We need people around the world to understand that a healthy ocean is critical to a healthy planet and climate action.”

    Heartbeat of the Ocean has a special message for you as Lithuania’s European Commissioner for the Environment, Oceans and Fisheries: the future of Europe’s fish and ocean life are in your hands. This is not just a good line for social media – it is also a deeper message and an urgent call for action. In Vilnius we painted in sub-zero temperatures to communicate our message, now we call on you to take decisive and bold action to protect the ocean, and so safeguard the lives and communities who depend on it… and that means all of us”.

     

    Stunning Mural Delivers Ocean & Climate Action Message in European Commissioner’s Hometown
    Boa Mistura with the mural in Vilnius
    Our Fish/Dalius Pacevičius

    “By ending destructive and over-fishing and restoring the health of the ocean, we improve the chances for the future of humanity. This sounds wild, but that is what is at stake, and the Commissioner you are in the extraordinary position of being able to deliver on that. We will keep spreading the message, if you please deliver on the action”, concludes the letter.

    ENDS

    Read the open letter here:

    https://our.fish/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Open-Letter-to-Commissioner_2Feb2022.pdf

     

    Watch video of the creation of Heartbeat of the Ocean mural:

    https://youtu.be/9YCARRDbgSM

    Boa Mistura website: https://www.boamistura.com/en/bio-en/

    Stunning Mural Delivers Ocean & Climate Action Message in European Commissioner’s Hometown

    https://our.fish/press/stunning-mural-delivers-ocean-climate-action-message-in-european-commissioners-hometown/

     

    Contacts 

    Dave Walsh, Our Fish Communications Advisor, +34 691 826 764, press@our.fish

     

     

  • More than 150,000 Europeans call on EU to ban bottom-trawling to protect ocean and climate

    More than 150,000 Europeans call on EU to ban bottom-trawling to protect ocean and climate

     More than 150,000 Europeans call on EU to ban bottom-trawling to protect ocean and climate
    Photo: Kim Lelux/Oceana

    Environmental NGOs present Commissioner Sinkevičius with giant pop-up storybook on how bottom-trawling impacts our marine environment 

    Brussels, 20 December 2021: – A giant colourful pop-up book depicting the devastation caused by destructive bottom trawling – and how the marine environment thrives in its absence – was delivered to European Union (EU) Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevičius by NGOs this morning, on behalf of more than 150,000 Europeans who have signed a petition calling for the EU to phase out destructive fishing practices, starting with an immediate ban of bottom trawling in all Marine Protected Areas. [1]

    The tens of thousands of signatories are demanding that EU Commissioner Sinkevičius (responsible for the environment, ocean and fisheries) and EU Commission Executive Vice-president Frans Timmermans (responsible for the EU Green Deal) include a ban on bottom-trawling in the upcoming EU ‘Action plan to conserve fisheries resources and protect marine ecosystems’ (Ocean Action Plan), to be adopted next spring. Bottom trawling, the most harmful fishing method for the environment and climate, is widely used in Europe where it impacts more than 50% of the seabed, and even takes place inside Marine Protected Areas.

    Oceana, Seas At Risk, Our Fish, WeMove Europe, Whale and Dolphin Conservation, and Environmental Justice Foundation, delivered the 1.5m by 2.5m pop-up book, which features both Commissioners Sinkevičius and Timmermans embarking on an ocean adventure modeled on The Life Aquatic, a popular film which references the work of famous ocean explorer and conservationist Jacques-Yves Cousteau, outside the European Commission headquarters in Brussels. The book presents a story on how the EU has the chance to turn the tide on destructive fishing by banning bottom-trawling, through a journey from current underwater devastation to a healthy, thriving and resilient marine environment.

    Vera Coelho, Senior Director of Advocacy at Oceana in Europe said “Marine Protected Areas, as the name suggests, are supposed to afford protection to marine life, yet in 2020 over 2.5 million hours of bottom-trawling took place inside them. It is unacceptable that the EU continues condoning the destruction of the very places it has committed to protect. This madness can and must be fixed now, for good.”

    Tobias Troll, Marine Policy Director at Seas At Risk added “European citizens start to realise that the seas are fragile ecosystems that need protection because they are the life support system of the planet. Destructive fishing techniques like bottom trawling must end, inside marine protected areas but also beyond. We need a just transition to low impact fisheries to protect biodiversity and allow future generations of small scale fisherfolk and coastal communities to have a good life.

    Rebecca Hubbard, Program Director, Our Fish said “We can’t just continue with pledges and promises forever – we are running out of time and every ton of carbon counts. It’s time that the EU got serious about transitioning out of destructive fishing methods such as bottom trawling, which produces CO2 emissions through burning fuel, releasing carbon stored in the seabed, and depleting fish populations, and instead secured a sustainable and resilient future for our climate, ocean and coastal communities.” 

    Giulio Carini, Senior Campaigner, WeMove Europe said: “Almost half of the EU population lives within 50 kilometers of the sea, and no one wants to have a devastated and dead ocean for decades to come.” 

    Steve Trent, CEO, Environmental Justice Foundation said: “As well as destroying ocean ecosystems, endangering wildlife, and threatening coastal livelihoods, bottom trawling is also hastening climate breakdown. This practice churns up the seabed, releasing vital stores of carbon that have lain safely locked away for centuries. It is gravely disappointing that the EU, which has led progressive efforts to improve sustainability in fisheries, still allows bottom trawling within protected areas. This must end now.”

    Background

    –     Bottom-contacting gear, including dredging and bottom trawling, is the most unselective and destructive fishing gear. The method involves dragging heavy weighted nets across the sea floor, indiscriminately catching all types of living creatures and habitats that happen to be on their way. Such trawling can strip up to 41% of invertebrate life from the sea-bed, and the ocean floor can take many years to recover. Its continuous use has led to drastic, and in some cases irreversible, degradation of marine ecosystems including habitats like corals and seagrass, as well as sensitive species like sharks, turtles and dolphins. Moreover, bottom trawling disturbs the seabed and releases large amounts of carbon stored in sediments into the sea – novel, early-stage research suggests a level of released carbon that would put it on par with the aviation sector (study).

    –     Recent data by Oceana revealed how EU countries continue to allow destructive fishing in Europe’s Marine Protected Areas, with over 2.5 million hours of bottom fishing occurring in 2020 inside areas supposedly designated to protect Europe’s most valuable and threatened marine species and habitats.

    –     A socioeconomic analysis commissioned by Seas At Risk has revealed that a ban on bottom-contacting gear (bottom trawling and bottom dredging) in Marine Protected Areas would yield net benefits as soon as four years after the ban comes into force.

    –     The EU Action plan to conserve fisheries resources and protect marine ecosystems, announced in the EU 2030 Biodiversity Strategy, is expected in 2022. An EU public consultation is open until December 20th..

    * Ends *

    #BanBottomTrawling

     

    Photos and video footage of the petition delivery:

    [1] :Petition “Stop destroying our ocean” on the WeMove Europe platform.

    Contacts 

    Sara Tironi, Communications Officer Seas At Risk, +32 483 457 483, stironi@seas-at-risk.org

    Dave Walsh, Communications Advisor, Our Fish +34 691 826 764, press@our.fish

    Emily Fairless, Communications officer, Oceana in Europe +32 478 038 490 efairless@oceana.org

    Giulio Carini, Senior Campaigner, WeMove Europe, +39 348 5333 846, giulio@wemove.eu 

  • More than 150,000 Europeans call on EU to ban bottom-trawling to protect ocean and climate

    More than 150,000 Europeans call on EU to ban bottom-trawling to protect ocean and climate

     More than 150,000 Europeans call on EU to ban bottom-trawling to protect ocean and climate
    Photo: Kim Lelux/Oceana

    Environmental NGOs present Commissioner Sinkevičius with giant pop-up storybook on how bottom-trawling impacts our marine environment 

    Photo and video available here

    Brussels, 20 December 2021: – A giant colourful pop-up book depicting the devastation caused by destructive bottom trawling – and how the marine environment thrives in its absence – was delivered to European Union (EU) Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevičius by NGOs this morning, on behalf of more than 150,000 Europeans who have signed a petition calling for the EU to phase out destructive fishing practices, starting with an immediate ban of bottom trawling in all Marine Protected Areas. [1]

    The tens of thousands of signatories are demanding that EU Commissioner Sinkevičius (responsible for the environment, ocean and fisheries) and EU Commission Executive Vice-president Frans Timmermans (responsible for the EU Green Deal) include a ban on bottom-trawling in the upcoming EU ‘Action plan to conserve fisheries resources and protect marine ecosystems’ (Ocean Action Plan), to be adopted next spring. Bottom trawling, the most harmful fishing method for the environment and climate, is widely used in Europe where it impacts more than 50% of the seabed, and even takes place inside Marine Protected Areas.


    Video: Oceana.

    Oceana, Seas At Risk, Our Fish, WeMove Europe, Whale and Dolphin Conservation, and Environmental Justice Foundation, delivered the 1.5m by 2.5m pop-up book, which features both Commissioners Sinkevičius and Timmermans embarking on an ocean adventure modeled on The Life Aquatic, a popular film which references the work of famous ocean explorer and conservationist Jacques-Yves Cousteau, outside the European Commission headquarters in Brussels. The book presents a story on how the EU has the chance to turn the tide on destructive fishing by banning bottom-trawling, through a journey from current underwater devastation to a healthy, thriving and resilient marine environment.

    Vera Coelho, Senior Director of Advocacy at Oceana in Europe said “Marine Protected Areas, as the name suggests, are supposed to afford protection to marine life, yet in 2020 over 2.5 million hours of bottom-trawling took place inside them. It is unacceptable that the EU continues condoning the destruction of the very places it has committed to protect. This madness can and must be fixed now, for good.”

    Tobias Troll, Marine Policy Director at Seas At Risk added “European citizens start to realise that the seas are fragile ecosystems that need protection because they are the life support system of the planet. Destructive fishing techniques like bottom trawling must end, inside marine protected areas but also beyond. We need a just transition to low impact fisheries to protect biodiversity and allow future generations of small scale fisherfolk and coastal communities to have a good life.

    Rebecca Hubbard, Program Director, Our Fish said “We can’t just continue with pledges and promises forever – we are running out of time and every ton of carbon counts. It’s time that the EU got serious about transitioning out of destructive fishing methods such as bottom trawling, which produces CO2 emissions through burning fuel, releasing carbon stored in the seabed, and depleting fish populations, and instead secured a sustainable and resilient future for our climate, ocean and coastal communities.” 

    Giulio Carini, Senior Campaigner, WeMove Europe said: “Almost half of the EU population lives within 50 kilometers of the sea, and no one wants to have a devastated and dead ocean for decades to come.” 

    Steve Trent, CEO, Environmental Justice Foundation said: “As well as destroying ocean ecosystems, endangering wildlife, and threatening coastal livelihoods, bottom trawling is also hastening climate breakdown. This practice churns up the seabed, releasing vital stores of carbon that have lain safely locked away for centuries. It is gravely disappointing that the EU, which has led progressive efforts to improve sustainability in fisheries, still allows bottom trawling within protected areas. This must end now.”

    Background

    –     Bottom-contacting gear, including dredging and bottom trawling, is the most unselective and destructive fishing gear. The method involves dragging heavy weighted nets across the sea floor, indiscriminately catching all types of living creatures and habitats that happen to be on their way. Such trawling can strip up to 41% of invertebrate life from the sea-bed, and the ocean floor can take many years to recover. Its continuous use has led to drastic, and in some cases irreversible, degradation of marine ecosystems including habitats like corals and seagrass, as well as sensitive species like sharks, turtles and dolphins. Moreover, bottom trawling disturbs the seabed and releases large amounts of carbon stored in sediments into the sea – novel, early-stage research suggests a level of released carbon that would put it on par with the aviation sector (study).

    –     Recent data by Oceana revealed how EU countries continue to allow destructive fishing in Europe’s Marine Protected Areas, with over 2.5 million hours of bottom fishing occurring in 2020 inside areas supposedly designated to protect Europe’s most valuable and threatened marine species and habitats.

    –     A socioeconomic analysis commissioned by Seas At Risk has revealed that a ban on bottom-contacting gear (bottom trawling and bottom dredging) in Marine Protected Areas would yield net benefits as soon as four years after the ban comes into force.

    –     The EU Action plan to conserve fisheries resources and protect marine ecosystems, announced in the EU 2030 Biodiversity Strategy, is expected in 2022. An EU public consultation is open until December 20th..

    * Ends *

    #BanBottomTrawling

     

    Photos and video footage of the petition delivery:

    https://www.dropbox.com/sh/f620khxlmc6xalg/AAAkqtP0wC-bIi87pxkBXMVla?dl=0

    [1] :Petition “Stop destroying our ocean” on the WeMove Europe platform.

    Contacts 

    Sara Tironi, Communications Officer Seas At Risk, +32 483 457 483, stironi@seas-at-risk.org

    Dave Walsh, Communications Advisor, Our Fish +34 691 826 764, press@our.fish

    Emily Fairless, Communications officer, Oceana in Europe +32 478 038 490 efairless@oceana.org

    Giulio Carini, Senior Campaigner, WeMove Europe, +39 348 5333 846, giulio@wemove.eu 

  • AGRIFISH: EU Fisheries Ministers to Proudly Keep on Overfishing in 2022

    AGRIFISH: EU Fisheries Ministers to Proudly Keep on Overfishing in 2022

    #Endoverfishing

    Our Fish & Seas at Risk

     

     

    Brussels, 14 December, 2021- European Fisheries Ministers, gathered in Brussels to set fishing limits for fish populations in EU seas for 2022, this morning decided to continue overfishing of over one third of stocks, in disregard for both science and EU law. [1]

    Ahead of this week’s EU AGRIFISH Council meeting, several countries – Spain, Portugal and France in particular – proudly stated their intention to go against both scientific advice and EU legislation on fishing limits for EU-only fished stocks, claiming to defend fishing industry interests [2], despite there being no future for the fishing industry without ending overfishing and achieving healthy fish populations.

    As a result, despite efforts from the European Commission to make progress towards ending overfishing, fisheries ministers have today disregarded the maximum fishing limits proposed by scientists for iconic fish stocks such as southern hake, sole or nephrops. This runs counter to warnings from the Scientific, Technical and Economic Committee for Fisheries (STECF), which for the first time since 2005 has reported a setback in progress towards ending overfishing in EU waters.

    “It is unacceptable that ministers openly advocate for ignoring the advice given by scientists and instead choose to respond to industry lobbyists”, says Andrea Ripol, Fisheries Policy Officer of Seas At Risk. “Ministers have this morning decided to continue overfishing, claiming that this was necessary for socio-economic reasons. But what they are failing to grasp is that ending overfishing and ensuring abundant fish populations is in the interest of fishers, and theses narrow-minded decisions will only jeopardise the health of our ocean, our planetary support system, and with it, the fishing industry and communities they are claiming to protect” she added.

    “It’s shocking that EU fisheries ministers remain so dysfunctional and out of touch with the concerns of European citizens, that they continue overfishing as if they will not be held responsible for fulfilling their legal obligations, or for the repercussions of worsening the ecological and climate crisis”, said Rebecca Hubbard, Program Director for Our Fish [3]. “EU leaders must hold their fisheries ministers to account for the laws and pledges they’ve signed up to, both internationally and at home, including ending overfishing.”

    “The world is waking up to how important it is to protect the ocean in the face of climate change, and to restore fish populations and healthy seas; if fisheries ministers insist on remaining at odds with reality, they must be replaced by functional decision-makers that not only abide by the rules, but manage fishing so that the ocean can provide the fish, livelihoods, and climate that we need to survive and thrive. The European Commission’s forthcoming Action plan to conserve fisheries resources and protect marine ecosystems is an opportunity to ensure that the true cost of fishing is monitored, and that fisheries management delivers climate action”, concluded Hubbard. NGO recommendations for the Action Plan can be found here.

    The European Commission and EU fisheries ministers also appear to have taken a risky, and non-transparent approach to proposing 2022 fishing opportunities for shared fish stocks if the EU and UK cannot reach agreement by December 20th; instead of proposing 25% of the scientific advice by the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) for 2022 as the total allowable catch for the first quarter, they have proposed various quantities, many of which are simply 25% of the 2021 total allowable catch or higher. This is high-risk gambling with the health of fish stocks, said the NGOs. There is minimum transparency around the whole process, which makes any promises from Ministers that they “will follow the science” almost impossible to assess.

    END

     

    Contacts

    Sara Tironi, Communication Officer, Seas At Risk +32 483 457 483 stironi@seas-at-risk.org

    Dave Walsh, Communications Advisor, Our Fish +34 691 826 764, press@our.fish

     

    NOTES

    [1] The reformed Common Fisheries Policy includes the fundamental objective to progressively restore and maintain fish stocks above sustainable levels, specifically above levels capable of producing the maximum sustainable yield. The legislation also states that this objective shall be achieved by 2015 or progressively by 2020 at the latest for all stocks.

    [2] France, Spain and Portugal claim to be going against against both scientific advice and EU legislation:

    Planas confirma a las CCAA que propondrá “alternativas” al Consejo para lograr la viabilidad de la flota en 2022: https://industriaspesqueras.com/noticia-68720-seccion-Pol%C3%ADtica_de_Pesca

    Tweet by French Minister Annick Giradin: https://twitter.com/AnnickGirardin/status/1470006727420661763

    Tweet by Spanish Ministry:https://twitter.com/mapagob/status/1469970060911550464

    Spain and Portugal risk overfishing in the Mediterranean and the Bay of Biscay: https://www.investigate-europe.eu/en/2021/spain-and-portugal-risk-overfishing/

    Planas defenderá los intereses de la pesca en el Mediterráneo en una negociación “muy dura”

    https://valenciaplaza.com/planas-defendera-intereses-pesca-mediterraneo-negociacion-muy-dura

    Carmen Crespo califica la propuesta de cuotas de la CE como ”inasumible” y dice que carece del aval científico necesario: https://industriaspesqueras.com/noticia.php?id=68748

    España y Portugal obvian a los científicos y cierran los ojos ante la sobrepesca en el Mediterráneo y el golfo de Vizcaya: https://www.infolibre.es/internacional/espana-portugal-arriesgan-sobrepesca-mediterraneo-golfo-vizcaya_1_1214976.html

    [3] 3 March 2020: EU Eurobarometer Survey: Protecting the environment and climate is important for over 90% of European citizens

    https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/IP_20_331

    “94% of citizens in all EU Member States say that protecting the environment is important to them.”

    “The Eurobarometer Survey .. reveals that citizens want more to be done to protect the environment, and that they believe responsibility should be shared by big companies and industry, national governments and the EU, as well as citizens themselves. The interviewed citizens considered that the most effective ways of tackling environmental problems are ‘changing the way we consume’ and ‘changing the way we produce and trade’.”

     

  • Stunning Mural Delivers Ocean & Climate Action Message in European Commissioner’s Hometown

    Stunning Mural Delivers Ocean & Climate Action Message in European Commissioner’s Hometown

    Stunning Mural Delivers Ocean & Climate Action Message in European Commissioner’s Hometown
    Stunning Mural Delivers Ocean & Climate Action Message in European Commissioner’s Hometown. “Save the Ocean to Save the Climate”. Our Fish/Dalius Pacevičius

    “Save the Ocean to Save the Climate” – message to Virginijus Sinkevičius in Vilnius, Lithuania

     

    Vilnius, Friday 3 December 2021:- Our Fish today presented a stunning mural, “Heartbeat of the Ocean” – painted on a nine-floor apartment building in Vilnius, Lithuania by the world-renowned team of Spanish artists Boa Mistura – to the European Commissioner for the Environment, Oceans and Fisheries Virginijus Sinkevičius, as an early Christmas gift; the mural send a strong reminder that not only is the health of the ocean in his hands, but that the Commissioner must act with urgency to protect it and the climate.

    “Save the Ocean to Save the Climate” is the message of the 300 square metre fresco, created during freezing temperatures by the artists of Boa Mistura, on the entire wall of a nine-storey apartment building at Sausio 13-osios st. 7, near Vilnius’s famed TV tower.

    “Our Fish wishes to send the people of Vilnius and European Commissioner for the Environment, Oceans and Fisheries, Virginijus Sinkevičius, a Christmas gift that lasts – a bold and beautiful mural that reminds us that the health of Europe’s ocean life is in our hands, and we must act with courage and commitment to protect it for future generations,” said Rebecca Hubbard, Program Director of the Our Fish campaign, which works to end overfishing and restore a healthy ocean ecosystem.

    The mural, which features fish, whales and other ocean creatures, aims to invite Vilnius’ residents, guests and decision-makers to pay more attention to protection of the ocean, and the importance of a healthy ocean to climate action.

    “European seas have been heavily overfished and the ecosystems degraded over many decades. This not only destroys wildlife and diminishes the ocean’s ability to provide us with food and jobs, it undermines its capacity to store carbon and adapt to the climate emergency,” said Hubbard.

    “Commissioner Sinkevičius must use his power, and act with inspired urgency to phase out destructive fishing and ensure a just transition to low-impact fishing, so that we can restore the ocean’s health and ensure it can keep defending us from the worst of climate change”.

    Stunning Mural Delivers Ocean & Climate Action Message in European Commissioner’s Hometown
    The Boa Mistura Team. Our Fish/Dalius Pacevičius

    The mural has been painted by four members of the Boa Mistura team, Pablo Ferreiro, Juan Jaume, Pablo Puron and Javier Ballesteros. Boa Mistura’s huge colourful works adorn buildings and streets, in Spain, Italy, Portugal, Germany, France, USA, Mexico, Colombia, Brazil, South Africa, China, and in other countries.

    “We have created this mural of sea creatures in Vilnius, representing how the Ocean is the heart of planet Earth. Without a healthy ocean, we cannot have a healthy planet – no heart, no life”, said Pablo Puróne, a member of Boa Mistura. “Our mural in Vilnius is our message to the world: message ‘Save the Ocean to Save the Climate’”.

    The European Commission is developing an Action Plan to make fisheries more sustainable, and protect marine ecosystems and their biodiversity, as a key part of their European Green Deal and Biodiversity Strategy for 2030. The European Commission is currently asking people for their feedback on the Action Plan in a targeted consultation until December 20.

    “I’m happy that the old Vilnius district of Karoliniškės just became more colourful. But even more – I’m delighted that this mural will remind passengers every day that ocean and sea creatures depend on our everyday choices. The seaside is quite far from Vilnius – we tend to remember it only in summer. But actually, our daily habits add up to climate change, or on the contrary – help to stop it. How we drive past this huge painting, what we eat each day – it’s time to pay more attention to these things. Oceans are warming and becoming uncomfortable to live in. We must pay attention to our carbon footprint, also to the fish species we eat if we want them to also stay in the oceans, not only in the mural,” said Inga Labutytė-Atkočaitienė, from the Lithuanian Fund for Nature, who spoke at the launch of the mural.

    Stunning Mural Delivers Ocean & Climate Action Message in European Commissioner’s Hometown

    ENDS

    Contact:

    Dave Walsh, Our Fish Communications Advisor, +34 691 826 764, press@our.fish

    Notes:

    Briefing: Fisheries management responds to climate and nature emergency

    https://our.fish/publications/briefing-fisheries-management-responds-to-climate-nature-emergency/

    NGO Shadow Action Plan: Realising the Ambition of the EU Biodiversity Strategy in the Ocean

    https://our.fish/publications/realising-the-ambition-of-the-eu-biodiversity-strategy-in-the-ocean/

     

    About Our Fish

    Our Fish is working to end overfishing and restore a healthy ocean ecosystem. By collaborating with others, and deploying robust evidence, we are calling for an end to overfishing as a critical and significant action to address the biodiversity and climate crisis. https://our.fish

     

  • Globally Acclaimed Artists Boa Mistura Begin Ocean-Climate-Action Mural in Vilnius, Lithuania

    Globally Acclaimed Artists Boa Mistura Begin Ocean-Climate-Action Mural in Vilnius, Lithuania

    Work on Ocean Mural in Vilnius Commences

    Photo and video of completed artwork to follow – contact press@our.fish for more details

    Vilnius, Lithuania, 25 November 2021:- The world-renowned team of Spanish artists Boa Mistura is this week creating a reminder of how important healthy oceans are to our wellbeing, by creating a huge mural in Vilnius, Lithuania. Work began this week on the  300 square metre fresco, Heartbeat of the Ocean, which will soon adorn the entire wall of a nine-storey apartment building at Sausio 13-osios st. 7, near Vilnius’s famed TV tower. The mural intends to inspire action to reverse deterioration of the ocean – and negative impacts on the climate.

    Fish and other ocean creatures are the heroes in the painting, commissioned by Our Fish, a campaign  working to end overfishing and restore a healthy ocean ecosystem. The mural aims to invite Vilnius’ residents, guests and decision-makers to pay more attention to legal protection of the oceans and other water bodies.

    Save the Ocean to Save the Climate

    “We chose Vilnius for the Heartbeat of the Ocean mural, as it is the home city of the European Commissioner for the Environment, Oceans and Fisheries, Virginijus Sinkevičius. His mission to rebuild healthy fish populations and thriving ecosystems will not only ensure the oceans’ abilities to continue supporting life on the planet by providing all of us with oxygen and food – it will also contribute to sustaining the oceans’ protective powers against the worst effects of climate change”, Rebecca Hubbard, Our Fish Program Director, says.

    According to Hubbard, the European Commission is currently preparing an action plan to conserve fishery resources and protect marine ecosystems. “It is crucial for this plan to set out a pathway for reducing the devastating impact of overfishing on marine life and for bolstering the ocean’s capacity to store carbon. This pathway should outline a transition from destructive bottom trawling towards sustainable fisheries that will also benefit the marine environment and support the livelihoods of our coastal communities”, adds Hubbard.

    The mural will be painted by four members of the Boa Mistura team. These artists’ works, mostly huge, coloured paintings on buildings or streets, are visible in Spain, Italy, Portugal, Germany, France, USA, Mexico, Colombia, Brazil, South Africa, China, and in other countries.

    Work on Ocean Mural in Vilnius Commences
    The Boa Mistura team start work: Photo: Our Fish/Dalius Pacevičius

    “This mural in Vilnius is a new symbol representing awareness and care of the ocean. We have created a heart made of different marine species. It reminds us that every heartbeat of the planet comes from the bottom of the sea, and protecting and caring for marine biodiversity is of vital importance,“ Boa Mistura team members say.

    The slogan “Save the ocean to save the climate” will appear on the bottom of the mural. The nine-storey building was chosen for its strategic location providing great visibility for a large flow of residents and tourists. It’s on a lively avenue, next to the headquarters of the National Social Insurance, large supermarkets, and a polyclinic. The Boa Mistura team will complete their work in the next two weeks. Location details.

    About Our Fish

    Our Fish is working to end overfishing and restore a healthy ocean ecosystem. By collaborating with others, and deploying robust evidence, we are calling for an end to overfishing as a critical and significant action to address the biodiversity and climate crisis. https://our.fish

     

     

  • Fishy Decisions: Media Briefing on EU & UK Fishing Limits for 2022

    Fishy Decisions: Media Briefing on EU & UK Fishing Limits for 2022


    Watch the media briefing (in English)

    What: Fishy Decisions: How the EU and the UK will set Northeast Atlantic fishing limits for 2022
    When: Tuesday 16 Nov 1300-1400 CET
    Why: EU member states and the UK are deciding on fishing limits for 2022, which could continue overfishing or cause more multilateral diplomacy issues
    Who: Our Fish, Oceana, Seas At Risk, ClientEarth, Bund für Umwelt und Naturschutz Deutschland, Ecologistas en Acción, Sciaena, France Nature Environnement, Dutch Elasmobranch Society, Danish Society for Nature Conservation

    This joint-NGO media briefing unravels the obscure process of setting fishing limits between the EU, UK, Norway and other coastal states in the Northeast Atlantic for 2022. After years of setting fishing limits higher than scientific advice, EU, Norwegian and UK fisheries ministers must pull out all stops to halt the drastic decline in fish populations and ocean health if they are to deliver on promises made at home and internationally to end overfishing, and to halt the biodiversity and climate crises.

    Speakers:

      • Setting fishing limits – how does it work? Processes and the law, including the Brexit Agreement. Jenni Grossmann, ClientEarth.
      • State of the Stocks and European Seas – overfishing: past and present, and iconic fish at risk. Valeska Diemel, Bund für Umwelt und Naturschutz Deutschland.
      • The future of fishing in Europe: Lessons learned from 1st year of post-Brexit TACs and a changing climate. Javier Lopez, Oceana in Europe.

    Presentations:

    Setting fishing limits – how does it work? Processes and the law, including the Brexit Agreement (.pptx) Jenni Grossmann, Science and Policy Advisor, ClientEarth

    State of the stocks and European seas – Overfishing: past & present and iconic fish at risk (.pptx)  – Valeska Diemel​, Fisheries Policy Officer​, Bund für Umwelt und Naturschutz Deutschland

    The future of fishing in Europe: Lessons learned from 1st year of post-Brexit TACs and a changing climate. (.pptx) – Javier Lopez, Campaign Director, Oceana

    Conférence de presse en français

     

    Pressekonferenz auf Deutsch

     

    Conferencia de prensa en español

  • COP26: Not a Moment to Waste: Ocean Climate Action Needs to be Counted Now

    COP26: Not a Moment to Waste: Ocean Climate Action Needs to be Counted Now

    Save the Ocean to Save the Climate – Blue Carbon Breakfast Briefing Glasgow COP26
    Photo: Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert/Our Fish (click image for more photos)

    Glasgow, November 9th, 2021:- During an event jointly organised by Our Fish and Open Seas this morning, Save the Ocean to Save the Climate – Blue Carbon Breakfast Briefing, leading marine biologists, economists, NGOs and a Scottish Labour Advisor to COP26 called for acknowledgement by governments of the critical role played by the ocean in addressing the climate crisis, and for increased focus on monitoring and measuring blue carbon.

    Rashid Sumaila: Save the Ocean to Save the Climate – Blue Carbon Breakfast Briefing Glasgow COP26
    Rashid Sumaila and Emma Cavan. Photo: Jeremy-Sutton Hibbert/Our Fish

    “COP26 is a pivotal moment in the response to the global climate emergency, and the urgent need to limit warming to 1.5 degrees”, said Rashid Sumaila, Killam Professor at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver. “While countries are promising to cut emissions, one of our biggest carbon stores, the ocean, is still not being counted – or taken care of. Fishing can and has impacted the ocean’s capacity to store carbon and adapt to climate change, yet emissions from the fishing industry and sequestration from fish and the seabed are not included in nations’ climate action plans, or Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). This is a massive missed opportunity, and urgently needs rectifying, especially, as the mitigation of every tonne of CO2 counts.”

    “Sustainable fisheries management not only improves food security, it can curb the destruction of marine biodiversity, improve blue carbon stores and cut CO2 emissions – there are so many co-benefits, it should be called a climate super action!”, said Rebecca Hubbard, Programme Director with Our Fish. “Every tonne of CO2 counts, much of which is tied to the ocean; it’s time for world leaders to start demanding that fisheries managers put ocean-climate action at the heart of fisheries management, including in the EU.”

    Emma Cavan: Save the Ocean to Save the Climate – Blue Carbon Breakfast Briefing Glasgow COP26
    Emma Cavan. Photo: Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert/Our Fish

    “If destroying huge volumes of plant and animal life is not enough to stop industrial bottom trawling, perhaps protecting marine carbon sinks will be. Fish and seabed sediments lock carbon away and the life and sediment throughout the ocean depths must remain undisturbed to carry out their vital role in carbon sequestration”, said Emma Cavan, Research Fellow at Imperial College, London.

    Philip Taylor: Save the Ocean to Save the Climate – Blue Carbon Breakfast Briefing Glasgow COP26
    Philip Taylor. Photo: Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert/Our Fish

    “There is a massive marine hole in the way that we measure our country’s contribution to climate change. We urgently need to establish a system of accounting for losses of blue carbon habitats and a timeline for its implementation. Scotland has legal duties to protect blue carbon habitats, but our Climate Plan is not delivering this. Every year we lose more of these habitats due to the poor regulation of highly industrialised fishing methods such as scallop dredging, which scrape across the seafloor. For decades a hidden crisis of deforestation at sea has been unfolding – in order to stop this, we need to start counting blue carbon”, said Philip Taylor, Open Seas.

    Claudia Beamish: Save the Ocean to Save the Climate – Blue Carbon Breakfast Briefing Glasgow COP26
    Claudia Beamish. Photo: Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert/Our Fish

    “It took far too long, on a cross party basis, to get peatlands into the greenhouse gas inventory and for community action on peatlands protection and restoration to be supported. No more Scottish and UK governments’ procrastination on blue carbon – we know enough to act now – no more excuses! No time to lose!”, said Claudia Beamish, former Member of Scottish Parliament and Special Advisor to the Scottish Labour Group on COP26.

    ENDS

    Photo & Video

    Contacts

    Dave Walsh, Our Fish Communications Advisor, +34 691 826 764 press@our.fish

    Notes:

    Emma Cavan is a Research Fellow at Imperial College, London

    https://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/e.cavan

    Rashid Sumaila is a University Killam Professor at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver

    https://oceans.ubc.ca/rashid-sumaila/

    Article: Fish and the Ocean Play A Crucial Role In Regulating Our Climate and Should Not Be Consigned to COP26 Sidelines – Emma Cavan, Erica M. Ferrer and U. Rashid Sumaila

    https://our.fish/news/fish-and-the-ocean-play-a-crucial-role-in-regulating-our-climate-and-should-not-be-consigned-to-cop26-sidelines/

    About Open Seas

    Open Seas undertakes research, investigations and campaigns to improve the health of Scottish and UK seas and the sustainability of our seafood. A Scottish charity, we work with key people in coastal communities, seafood supply chains and government decision-makers.

    https://www.openseas.org.uk/

    About Our Fish

    Our Fish is working to end overfishing and restore a healthy ocean ecosystem. By collaborating with others, and deploying robust evidence, we are calling for an end to overfishing as a critical and significant action to address the biodiversity and climate crisis. https://our.fish

     

     

  • European Supermarket Magazine: Embracing Sustainable Fishing A Must To Guarantee Industry’s Future Stability: Report

    European Supermarket Magazine: Embracing Sustainable Fishing A Must To Guarantee Industry’s Future Stability: Report

    European Supermarket Magazine: Embracing Sustainable Fishing A Must To Guarantee Industry's Future Stability: Report

    The European Supermarket Magazine, 1 November 2021: Embracing Sustainable Fishing A Must To Guarantee Industry’s Future Stability: Report

     

    A report published by the Our Fish campaign and Low Impact Fishers of Europe (LIFE) has urged the EU to implement Article 17 of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) to allow for a more sustainable fishing industry.

    The report, How the EU can Transition to Low Environmental Impact, Low Carbon, Socially Just Fishing, outlines how Article 17 can play a crucial role in ending overfishing in EU waters and address the issues of biodiversity and climate change.

    Rebecca Hubbard, programme director with Our Fish, noted that “using quotas provides an opportunity to incentivise change” within the CFP, and pointed to a recent successful implementation of Article 17 by the French courts as an example of the change that can be enacted.

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