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Tuesday 27 June 2017

Busy Monday evening as the fleet prepare to sail.


The Still Waters takes on new combination bridles...a


and stitches a new cod end on the trawl...


while the Trevessa IV  gets set to take on ice after her mammoth refit...


they don't make them like that anymore - close-up view of the huge sawn frames used to build the Irish Arkincastle...


needle in one hand and, no way, is that a phone in the other?!.....young Nathan rides the whaleback of the St Georges...


as she heads out through the gaps for another trip down in the deep waters of the south west...


doing its bit for the environment, harbour worm fodder...


and the new supplies...


the Filly is all set to sail...


Newlyn swans, mum and her brood...


huge Brixham scalloper, Danielle makes her way through the gaps.

FROM TURMOIL – STRENGTH - A view from the NFFO

The bewildering change of political fortunes over the last few weeks prompts the fair question: what does it all mean for the prospects of the UK fishing industry as the UK leaves the European Union?

As the dust settles what has changed?
  • The negotiations between the EU and UK over the terms of the UK’s departure have begun. If “sufficient progress” is made, parallel negotiations on a post-Brexit trade deal will begin. Other than the important issue of what type of trade regime will apply to fisheries products, there is no reason why these negotiations should have a direct impact on the post-Brexit fisheries management arrangements. The UK will leave the Common Fisheries Policy by default when it leaves the EU and important issues such as future access arrangements and quota shares will be on the agenda for the first meetings of the new era, with the UK acting as an independent coastal state.
  • We have a new Secretary of State. In a telephone call with the Federation shortly after his appointment, Michael Gove indicated:
  1. Fishing was very close to his heart
  2. As long as he was in Government, he would do everything possible in his power to revise and enhance the prospects for the British fishing industry
  3. He looked forward to working with the NFFO towards our common aspirations
  4. He is clear that the moment the UK leaves the EU, the UK will become an independent coastal state with sovereign jurisdiction over its waters within its exclusive economic zone
  5. The Government will have to think very carefully about how to allow access to UK waters by non-UK vessels and the links to quota shares
  6. During the negotiations, the UK will have to take a robust line on some issues, fishing included
  7. He would like to visit Norway and Faeroes to learn how they manage their fisheries and would value the Federation's thoughts
  • George Eustice, returns as UK Fisheries Minister, with strong credentials and reason to seek the best possible outcome for fishing from the UK’s departure from the EU.
  • The Government’s weakened parliamentary position has made them dependent, with or without a formal agreement, on the votes of the DUP to get its legislation through Parliament. Prior to the election the DUP endorsed the NFFO’s priorities:
  1. “Fairer quota shares
  2. The 12 mile exclusive zone
  3. Proportionate advantage from our exclusive economic zone
  4. Flexible and responsive management of our stocks
  5. Free trade in fishing products”
  • cohort of 13 Scottish Conservatives, who owe their seats in no small part to the fishing vote, are committed to the UK outside the CFP; at the same time the likelihood of a second independence in Scotland has receded.
  • It is worth recalling as well, David Davis, Brexit Secretary’s assurances to the NFFO shortly after the EU referendum, that fishing held a high place in the Governments priorities
All in all, the likelihood of securing a good deal for fishing as the UK leaves the EU has been strengthened from all the political turmoil.
Fisheries Bill
The significance of the Fisheries Bill announced as part of the Queen’s speech is that it would lay the legal foundations for a framework to manage fisheries in the UK EEZ after the UK leaves the EU. This would include the key elements of quota setting and access arrangements. A lot of hard thinking has been going on within the Federation and within government on the contents of the Bill and the shape of the management regime that we want to see post-Brexit. Some of this can be developed over time but the Fisheries Bill will ensure that we are ready from Day 1 to manage our fisheries.
We already know that it is the Government’s intention with the Great Repeal Bill to transfer all EU law into UK law except where that is” inoperable”, unwise or undesirable. The essential parts of the CFP – the equal access principle and the principle of relative stability – would not make the transition and the Fisheries Bill will fill that void.

Monday 26 June 2017

Monday morning after the biggest tide of the year!


Almost all the fish was from beam trawlers on this morning's market...



with plenty of ice o the fish being the order of the day, a sight that will soon pass once the £1.3 million market refurbishment has taken place ...



and the entire market becomes what is effectively a giant walk-in fridge...



art is never far from fish in Newlyn...



blushed turbot, sounds so posh...



a Dory duo...



8-leggers aplenty...



mackerel are plentiful over in St Ives Bay...



but still scattered all over Mount's Bay and still proving hard to find for the local handliners...



though there are signs of a few bass at the Runnelstone...



tub gurnard belly-up...



turbot have a fine pair of lips...



beastly ray...



what about a scallop or two...



Newlyn fast fish...



waiting for water at the market...



seems the Algrie is flying some additional day signal - or is it just a clever ruse to rid the whaleback of seagulls - and the serious cleaning job that follows?..



a green-team boat...



plenty of painting work to be done on the Arkincastle...



red is the new blue in boat colours...



or white...



there is some serious net handling gear on the port's biggest purse seiner...



as the pelagic fleet wait for signs of sardine...



the business bit of scallop gear...



at least the worm fed on the harbour timbers and not the boats - not that there are too many wooden boats in the harbour these days...



most hulls, like the punt, Suzie are GRP or steel...



another passing yacht bound away...



Plymouth bretheren...



a fine morning with all the netters still in port over the big tide...



some serious square-format photography in the harbour this morning...



the finest fish restaurant in Newlyn...



the classic sailing boat, Provident at anchor off the Mount...



all set to sail to the Scillys...



the new and the old Scilly supply boats go stern-to-stern.

Sunday 25 June 2017

2017 Scottish Inshore Fisheries Conference papers.

Scottish Inshore Fisheries Conference

Inshore Fisheries Conference LogoThe fourth Scottish Inshore Fisheries Conference was held on Thursday 27th and Friday 28th April 2017 at Eden Court in Inverness.
The conference was launched with a session to introduce the EMFF-funded Scottish Inshore Fisheries Integrated Data System or ‘SIFIDS’ Project. 
On Friday 28th April 2017, Fergus Ewing MSP (Cabinet Secretary for the Rural Economy and Connectivity) opened the day with a keynote speech followed by Q&A. Delegates had the opportunity to attend sessions on a variety of subjects including crab and lobster fisheries management, Brexit, marketing the local catch and inshore fisheries management in Norway, delivered by the Norwegian Government's Directorate of Fisheries.   
The final event was a plenary Q&A session hosted by Daniel Owens (Fenners Chambers), with Stewart Crichton (Orkney Sustainable Fisheries), Anne-Margaret Anderson (SWFPA) and Alastair MacLeod (creel fishermen).
The Cabinet Secretary's speech and the plenary Q&A are available to view here.
Presentations from the 'Marketing the Local Catch' and 'Norwegian Inshore Fisheries Management' workshops are available below. The presentation from the 'Crab & Lobster Management' workshop will be available shortly.
Three previous conferences have been held: at Eden Court in 2015Perth Concert Hall in 2014 and Eden Court, Inverness in 2013. Further details are available on their individual pages.

Downloadable documents:

Title:Inshore Fisheries Conference
Description:Information about the annual Scottish Inshore Fisheries Conference
File:Scottish Inshore Fisheries Conference 2017 - Flyer [PDF, 1099.5 kb: 27 Feb 2017]
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File:Workshop Presentation - Marketing the Local Catch [PDF, 2455.8 kb: 04 May 2017]
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File:Workshop Presentation - Norwegian Inshore Fisheries Management 2017 [PDF, 9131.1 kb: 04 May 2017]
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File:Crab & Lobster Presentation SIFC 2017 [PDF, 3499.0 kb: 10 May 2017]
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File:Inshore Fisheries Conference 2017 - Summary of Proceedings [PDF, 2522.9 kb: 21 Jun 2017]
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Friday 23 June 2017

Brexit one year on - another viewpoint.



"LIVING in Moray, I found it infuriating to see placards everywhere depicting a smiling Haddock draped in the Union Jack proclaiming that a vote to leave the EU would “Save Our Fishing”.


700 miles south of Moray - Anti EU and Cornwall Ukip aupporter, Mike Mahon in the early 2000s.

"Moray was the closest-run district in the whole of Scotland in the EU referendum, with entire family dynasties with links to fishing casting their vote to leave based purely on the misguided mantra that the EU is responsible for the demise of the fishing industry in Scotland.
As a former fisherman during the 1980s, and at that time part owner of new-built 65-foot trawler, I think it is time for all of our fishing communities to face up to some hard truths about the fishing industry and at whom the finger of blame for its demise should be pointed.
During the 1980s and early 1990s, the Scottish fleet had become the biggest and most powerful in Europe, to the point where the catching power far outstripped the resource. Boatyards were booming and so were the local economies. The vast majority of these vessels, however, including the one in which I was a partner, were built with the help of a 50 per cent EU grant. Without this, the boat could never have been built. The same applies to the vast majority of boats built in Scotland in that era.
As this new generation of boats, equipped with the cutting-edge of fish-finding equipment, became larger and ever more powerful, the need to catch more fish to fund them increased. New methods of pair trawling utilising much heavier and larger nets were developed, as well as twin-rig trawling with one powerful vessel towing two large nets. This effectively rendered no single area of the seabed, including the spawning grounds, safe from the Scottish fleets’ nets. Many owners had two rotating crews that would change over straight after landing so that the vessel turned right around and was constantly at sea, hammering the fishing grounds seven days a week.
A Catch-22 situation was created where the large boats were so expensive to run and heavily financed that they couldn’t afford to stop fishing for a single day!
By the end of the early 1990s the fish stocks were utterly devastated, with landings down vastly year on year and cod on the brink of extinction and haddock and whiting heading the same way. Extreme action had to be taken, with quota cuts and days at sea being introduced by the EU as the stark scientific data was presented but almost immediately and unsurprisingly dismissed by fishing industry leaders as unproven nonsense.
The EU grants for new vessels had stopped, but young ambitious skippers then turned to the big banks to finance even more powerful super trawlers being built both at Scottish and European yards, which were designed to work in the most extreme conditions at the outer reaches of the continental shelf and Rockall. The traditional inner waters had now been fished out and decimated, not by the EU but by our own Scottish fleet. The EU finally took drastic action when many fish species teetered on the brink of never recovering, and quotas were immediately cut again to the point where the new larger vessels were struggling to stay viable.
To rein in the size of the fleet, a short-term decommissioning incentive scheme based on the vessels’ tonnage and horsepower was introduced, with a maximum compensation of £1 million for the largest vessels. Skippers who had gambled by building multimillion-pound vessels at foreign yards now found themselves at the mercy of the banks to whom they had turned to finance their venture. Cold, hard economics of the banks decided the fate of many young north-east skippers as the unsympathetic banks decided to cut their losses at the fear of further quota cuts and grab the decommissioning payment while it was available, resulting in almost brand new multimillion-pound vessels sailing to the scrapyards of Denmark to be cut up and their owners made bankrupt with their livelihoods in ruins. Many other boat-owners decided to accept the decommissioning grants as well due to a mass migration of crews to the oil industry, adding to the already intolerable stress of trying to stay viable in impossible circumstances.
Today, fish stocks are recovering to healthy levels, but only thanks to EU intervention. Had the Scottish fleet been allowed to continue as it was the end-game would have been the same for the fleet, but there would have been no fish stocks today and no recovery. Many fishing families fished ethically, but if fishermen – especially those from that era who are blaming the EU while waving a Union Jack – need to point the finger at anyone for the tragic demise of the industry and our communities, then I suggest they take a good long look in the mirror."
Graeme Goodall
Buckie, Moray



Brexit: What next for UK fisheries?

With the words of Michael Gove still ringing in the ears of those on Peterhead Fish market this morning:







We  present the Government's report on what Brexit means for the industry:

The implications of Brexit for fisheries are highly uncertain and will depend on future negotiations with the EU and future UK Government policy. The Government announced its intention to introduce a new Fisheries Bill in the 2017 Queen's Speech.





In 2015, fishing contributed £604 million to UK GDP and employed around 12,000 fishers and, as of 2016, the fish processing industry supported around 18,000 jobs across 376 fish processing sites.

The implications of Brexit for fisheries are highly uncertain. The implications will depend on future negotiations with the EU and future UK Government policy. The Government announced its intention to introduce a Fisheries Bill in the 2017 Queen’s Speech, which will: “Enable the UK to control access to its waters and set UK fishing quotas once it has left the EU.”

Possible implications, based on the views of different stakeholders and evidence from existing non-EU European countries, may include:

The UK obtaining exclusive national fishing rights up to 200 miles from the coast. However, the UK may trade-off some of these rights in order to obtain access to the EU’s sea area or access to the EU market for fisheries products;
Impacts on the UK’s ability to negotiate favourable fish quotas for UK fishers with the EU. It is not possible to say whether the UK will be more or less able to obtain satisfactory quotas for fishers;


  • The need for a new mechanism to enable the UK to negotiate and agree annual fishing quotas with the EU and other countries;
  • The introduction of a UK fisheries management and enforcement system. This in many respects may mirror the existing arrangements for managing fisheries, albeit with additional resources required;
  • Restrictions on EU market access for fishery products (depending on the outcome of negotiations) and less influence in discussions on determining EU market rules for fish;


Less certainty around public funding of support for fishing communities or environmental sustainability; and Issues related to possible changes to the protection of the marine environment.

Published Wednesday, June 21, 2017 Commons Briefing papers CBP-7669