WE DIVED FOR EUROPEAN FISH WEEK!
EcoDive Volunteer Opportunities, Marine Conservation Issues, Marine Life 1 Comment »We dived and saw what could be the remaining Mediterranean fish!
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We dived and saw what could be the remaining Mediterranean fish!
Please sign the petition: www.ocean2012.eu/petition
Transforming European Fisheries from OCEAN2012 on Vimeo.
Please sign the petition: www.ocean2012.eu/petition
Europe’s new Fisheries Commissioner Maria Damanaki opened her first fishing quota talks by stating that tougher measures were required to bring species back from danger to more commercially viable levels.
“I want to be clear that the quota levels set must respect all the European Union’s commitments to sustainability,” she said in a statement. However, her strategy will be hampered by widespread illegal fishing, a lack of data on the state of many stocks and fierce bargaining by coastal communities.
The Commission has proposed the establishment of an EU market for Individual Transferable Quotas (ITQs), which it thinks will reduce overcapacity, improve conservation and maximise the economic efficiency of the fishing fleet.
OCEAN2012 has sent a letter to the members of the Fisheries Committee to share its position on the proposal. OCEAN2012 believes the phasing out of the current quota allocation system, replaced with a system that grants access based on a set of environmental and social criteria, is better placed to achieve sustainable fisheries.
About 60 percent of European Union fish stocks are outside safe biological limits. However, fishing nations catch around 34 percent more than scientists say is sustainable. Portugal and Spain have quotas that are still set 55 percent above the levels advised by fisheries scientists, pushing southern hake and anchovy outside safe biological limits, the Commission said in its report.
A target has been set by the EU Commission to get fisheries back to Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY) by 2015. However, some fish stocks are already so low that even if fishing stopped today MSY could not be achieved in that timescale.
The Pew Environment Group said Damanki’s strategy fell short on protection for deep sea fisheries. “For deep-sea fisheries in the Northeast Atlantic, the scientific advice is that all species, including endangered species of deep-sea sharks, are outside safe biological limits,” said Uta Bellion of the Pew group.