='"loading" + data:blog.mobileClass'>

Tuesday 20 March 2012

Hugh's FishFight in perspective



The CFP reform Watch web site summed up yesterday's 'proceedings in EU Parliament' following the discards debate. Although the motion was apparently to be overturned by a French led delegation (see beginning of article) - though it seems from sources inside the industry this was not what the professional fishermen of France wanted - the outcome achieved was their goal too! 


With instant global lines of communication it would be good to see even more key industry players making comments - the evidence was there yesterday - search on Twitter for #CFPReform and #discards for the evidence!


Hugh's FishFight despite bringing the discards debate to the table of many who might have sought to take it off the main menu has at least raised the debate above the level of politics. HFW was right on one thing when he says, "I am not a specialist, I only see a problem, I don't have the solution".  Now it is up to the industry to lead on the more practical aspects of reducing (no discards is not a practicable option for the majority of fisheries) discards - with examples like the Brixham beam trawler 50% leading by example. 


As Richard Lockheed has acknowledged and stated publicly, there is not one single solution that will sort this issue - time for all hands to keep up the pressure and avoid a simplistic response from the authorities coming over the horizon - to be avoided at all costs!


Fisheries press conference following the day's proceedings in EU parliament.

Council of the European Union - Agriculture and Fisheries

Fisheries - Press conference
Monday, March 19, 2012 at 19.00

Monday 19 March 2012

EU discards debate update - Hugh's happy!

Another round over in the discard debacle - but once the dust settles will this turn out to be a position held or merely a successful dawn raid with a few light casualties before another onslaught forces retreat?  - in the meantime, huge quantities of fish from the global pond are being swallowed by the world's biggest trawlers - see previous post.

Twitter traffic from the FishFight web site home page

African plunder - who is the PFA?


The legislation brought to bear on artisanal fishermen, whether here in the Uk or elsewhere in the EU or rest of the world must look almost insane when compared to the damge wrought by these huge mainly ex-Dutch freezer trawlers (many were no strangers to the mackerel and scad rich waters off Cornwall) now licensed to fish 'legally' off the west coast of Africa and other waters - read on......
"The German, Maartje Theadora, was our ‘target’. There was no singling it out from the others, they were all ‘Pelagic Factory-trawler Association’ vessels funded by EU tax payers’ money. European taxpayers have contributed to the construction and modernisation of these boats and their fishing gear. The EU has also paid €142 million to secure fishing rights for PFA vessels in Mauritanian and Moroccan waters.
With EU support the PFA scored profits for the period 2007-2009 of €54 million. The Ocean Inquirer states that without EU subsidies those profits would shrink to €7 million at best."
Quoted from blogger MikeMate aboard the Greenpeace vessel, Arctic Sunrise. 

Commentary on today's EU discard debate

The EU Fisheries Council meeting on Monday will direct Europe’s fishing fleets to confine their trawling off the coast of developing countries exclusively to “surplus resources” of fish, according to draft council conclusions seen by EurActiv. This would give priority access to local fishermen, who depend on the seas for their communities’ dietary needs.


“Due account should be taken of the coastal states' priorities in favour of its own fishing sector, while the Union should seek an appropriate share of the surplus resources,” the document says. But the conclusions stop short of measures that would reduce Europe’s fleet capacity, a politically contested safeguard against further depletion of the world’s rapidly dwindling fish stocks.
“This is the root of the problem,” Saskia Richartz, a Greenpeace spokeswoman told EurActiv. “There are just too many boats, and not enough fish - and that encourages illegal fishing and overfishing, including by large EU trawlers in the developing world.” Greenpeace claims that in just 10 hours on 14 March, their ship the Arctic Sunrise took action to stop seven “EU mega-trawlers” - which can each catch up to 250 tonnes of fish a day - from hoovering up marine life off the West African coast.


The change on Monday would establish guidelines for making such practices illegal.


Marine biodiversity
Protecting marine biodiversity is an EU policy goal, with implications for the continent’s fish-eaters and fishing communities alike. An EU communication last July instructed member states to “put in place measures to adjust the fishing capacity of their fleets in order to achieve an effective balance between such fishing capacity and their fishing opportunities”. But no deadline was attached, and the EU’s reformed Common Fisheries Policy last year also called for the issue to be addressed globally, perhaps with one eye on the gathering storm over the EU’s inclusion of foreign airlines in the Emissions Trading System.

“A high-level [international] conference to discuss ways of reducing capacity will be called for by the EU by 2013 to pave the way for a process aimed at addressing overcapacity at a global level,” the document said.


Discarding declaration
Environmentalists’ fears that the issue is being sidelined may be heightened if, as reported, France and Spain issue a declaration at today’s EU Fisheries Council aimed at blocking EU plans to ban the practice of discarding less profitable – but still edible – fish in the sea.

The Guardian newspaper reported last week that an EU compromise allowing fishermen to land all the fish they catch in exchange for compensation has met with strong opposition, centred around companies with industrial-scale vessels.
At least a million tonnes of fish and other sea animals caught in the North Sea alone are discarded every year, according to a recent World Wildlife Fund report


The discards amount to about one-third of the entire North Sea catch, the report said.


Article courtesy of Euractiv.

In context - A selection of tweets following today's EU Discards debate


Does this not capture the mood in the UK too?


Some comments and observations from Yan Giron, fishing consultant:


I am very concerned by the way NGOs have demonised the French position on discards , making this simplest and childish link : if you refuse an overall discard ban, it means you want to keep discard. This is a send-the-mob strategy


Which is untrue,( France promotes the tackling of discard by tackling bycatches). And we all have to be aware that without a discard ban, EU can not implement ITQs. A discard ban is so an opengate to ITQ.

The style of following is duefrom  a  group of Twitter message
  • Today will be discussed several measures including a ban on discards in the UK, this problem has become very important: 
  • The cause of the problem of discards is essentially twofold: a problem of gear selectivity and highgrading due to low quotas - 
  • For selectivity, we capture several species in addition to those we target. There are difficulties to tackle them through Technical research  research techniques - 
  • The French position is that we need more research on these aspects. position also supported by professionals - 
  • Highgrading due to poor quota are of most concern in countries that have established fishing quotas merchants (salable or praiseworthy) - 
  • In the EU,  countries are free to monetize their quotas, or not. England has done since the late 1990s. - 
  • Because of the monetization of quotas, the English fishermen now spend more than half of their expenditure to rent their quotas - 
  • Because of this monetization, the discard rate in the North Sea rose to 50%. This is not the case elsewhere - 
  • France rejects the monetization that creates speculation. She prefers to act on the selectivity.
  • The English and the board simply want to ban the dumping at sea, for all Europe. Because they might need it  
  • The English need it because they are already in a system of monetization of the quota.The Commission wants to impose on all the monetization
  • These quotas are called moneyables  ITQ, FQA, or TFC, transferable fishing concessions. They are the death of the small scale fishery
  • The French position was demonized last week in an article in The Guardian - Because the French position is not for the discard ban, pressure groups make us look like pirates
  • The shortcut is childish: opposed to the discard ban = want to keep discard. this is false and very serious - 
  • This means that professional fishermen can not define the best solutions for each case - 
  • The consequences are that by adopting a discard ban, the EU greatly facilitates its second goal : to privatize the resource [for all EU] - Refusing a discard ban on the contrary will give careful thought on the selectivity, which is to be close to the field - 
  • The Discard ban will immediately penalize fishermen and create a strong economic conditions which may cause bad impacts on vessel -
  •  Initiate a thorough examination of the selectivity is to begin a more difficult road, but more long-lasting as appropriated by fisherman - 
  • Moreover the discard ban will carry a right to market the undersize fish, anti ecological - 
  • This is the professional point of view. agree or not, you now have the keys to understanding the bottom of the case - 
  • And for the English, if they really want to solve their discard problem in the North Sea, they are free to choose their solution - 
But it makes no sense to apply them to all EU mechanically. European fisheries are rich in their diversity.
 - An easy way to cut the discard: cut FQA, ITQ (suppress : gold) or CFT because they  CREATES the problem of 50% Highgrading

Cold but crystal clear start to the week in Newlyn

 Signs of the summer season with Mermaid II in the harbour all set for the first angling trips of the year......
 for some of the beamers, this means it's lemon time......
 and there are boxes of them on display for auction........
 and still coming down the grading machine conveyor........
 plenty of good quality Dovers too.........
 the razors were soon snapped up.........
 while the net fish will have to wait for the auction to get to their end of the market.......
 there's a warm glow in the air this morning....... 
 good run of hake with the Ajax........
 anglers at the ready aboard the Sarah Steve........
 see the boats for sale pages for more info.......
when you have a quarry full of stone there must be a use for it somewhere.

Sunday 18 March 2012

Passing down a Breton trawler off Land's End


One track on the VesselTracker AIS shows the netter Ajax making her way across the traffic separation scheme as the Breton trawler Vierge De L'ocean tows down from more northerly ground.  Both boats will want to stay clear of one another's gear while they are fishing.



The Ajax made a mid-tide landing at Newlyn earlier today with 200 boxes put ashore for the Monday's market and 120 boxes consigned to Brixham by lorry.

Cefas Project 50%

At a time when discards are making the news and a way forward seems difficult we find some good news from the Cefas labs and the project they devised with the help of the Brixham beam trawler fleet.  Known as Project 50%, the results of the collaboration between gear technologists, fishermen and Cefas has produced impressive and credible improvements to discard rates and earnings. 


It's all here in a well illustrated report ready to download and read at leisure.