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Tuesday 17 October 2017

After yesterday evening, the fleet is bound away early today.


Workboats are just that these days - function over form ad extremum...


the list of visiting scallopers increased yet again with the arrival of Grattitude AB71 in town...


in and landed, fish boxes go back aboard the Crystal Sea...


 due to sail first thing in the morning once Ophelia has lifted her skirts and passed through quickly...


Arch Angell in daylight...



Tuesday morning and the Crystal Sea is back to the fishing.

The Trawler - October edition.


Catch up on the latest EU fishing industry news in this month's Trawler magazine.

Plymouth fishermen to get GPS lifejackets to prevent tragedies at sea





Fishermen in Plymouth are to be given state-of-the-art lifejackets in a bid to prevent future tragedies at sea.


Plymouth City Council has ordered 250 lifejackets with built-in locators, which give off distress signals to help identify the exact location of crews in the event of an emergency.


The tragic death of popular fisherman Tony Jones, whose body was discovered after the Solstice capsized about nine miles from Plymouth last month, provided a stark reminder of the dangers of the job.


After applying for funding last September, the council has been awarded £77,000 from the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund and the Maritime Management Organisation for the scheme, which it is hoped will help reduce loss of life and accidents within the local fishing industry.


The lifejackets will be distributed to eligible fishermen by Marine Co, which is supplying the equipment.

The project, which has been designed with input from fishermen’s representatives, SEAFISH and the emergency services, hopes to create a more coordinated community approach to training and equipment to reduce the number of fishermen’s lives lost at sea.

Last September, following a motion on notice at full council, the council applied to the Marine Management Organisation for funding through the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund to fund the purchase of personal flotation devices equipped with personal locator beacons.

Full story from the Plymouth Herald

Monday 16 October 2017

Hurricane Ophelia and fishing boats off Ireland


The excellent WindyTV website gives weather watchers a superb selection of data display possibilities easily selected from the side menu - results can be saved as 'favourite' views of data and waypoints set on the chart that trigger email alerts if you sign up (free) to the site...


Fastnet Lighthouse Twitter feed has been posting regular updates - and they are to the east of the most destructive path of the storm...



VesselFinder's AIS shows a number of big, mainly Spanish fishing vessels sheltering at anchor...


and plenty more tied up in Castletownbeare harbour...



and though this satellite AIS shot reveals that there are still plenty of fishing boats riding out the storm to the west of Ireland in and around the Porcupine Bank area...



a closer look at a wider view shows that there are indeed very few fishing boats south of Ireland where the most powerful part of the storm was predicted to pass - twenty years ago the boats would not have been able to predict where they fish with the confidence they can today...


and, as this WindyTV wave height chart shows the path giving the highest predicted waves is to the south of ROI...


the K1 weather buoy shows just how quickly wave height can increase at sea - to over 35 feet...


the screen shot of the anemometer at Cork Lighthouse right in the path of the storm...


though to give you some idea what boats have to contend with when fishing for mackerel - this was taken on the Lerwick registered Adenia a few years back during the making of this advert for Brewdog's Atlantic IPA beer.

Super trawlers: a case of too much fish in too few hands.

Dutch freezer SCH303 Ariadne - Super trawlers are the largest and most powerful of the freezer trawler fleet - their capacity to process huge quantities of fish daily is what makes them so efficient and effective.



The Fisheries (PECHE) Committee of the European Parliament organized a hearing last Monday 9 October on the theme “Super-trawlers: destructive or sustainable”, the title highlighting the polarised and impassioned nature of the issue. Papers presented to the hearing can be accessed via  http://www.europarl.europa.eu/committees/en/pech/events-hearings.html?id=20171002CHE02521


For many, the term super-trawler has come to signify a form of intensive factory fishing, essentially for small-pelagic species, undertaken by huge vessels over 100 metres long, spending several weeks at sea, with the capacity to catch hundreds of tonnes in one haul, and to process, freeze and store the catch on-board.


However, as highlighted by two of the speakers at the European Parliament hearing, with advances in technology, this description only fits one fleet segment. Gerard Van Balsfort, President of the Pelagic Freezer-trawler Association, highlighted that the catching capacity of a 125 metre freezer trawler spending several weeks at sea is very similar to that of a trawler half the size, which may use the same gear, but only spends a few days at sea. He also felt that to equate big with bad was not correct, that there was a place for both big and small under the sun.


Brian O’Riordan, from the Low Impact Fishers of Europe (LIFE) drew attention to the issue of sustainability, and the need to achieve the right balance between social, economic and environmental objectives, between current needs and future aspirations, and between different interests, between big and small. In his view, super-trawlers concentrated too much wealth and power in too few hands, upsetting the balance needed to achieve sustainable development for the benefit of all.


Professor Pere Puig Alenyà from the Marine Science Institute (ICM) from Barcelona noted that over the last 20 years the trend has been for much larger and more powerful trawlers using heavier gear, including steel trawl doors, to replace older, smaller and less destructive vessels. According to Professor Alenyà, this new generation of large demersal trawlers could also be categorized as “super-trawlers” due to their enormous catching capacity and destructive impact on marine life on the seabed. He went on to warn that supertrawlers “are currently destroying traditional fishing grounds and causing issues with the rest of the local trawling fleet that cannot fish on such a furrowed and heavily altered sea-floor.”


In many ways, the rise of supertrawlers was a perverse product of the Common Fisheries Policy that adopted a scrap and rebuild approach in the 1990s. The then European Fisheries Commissioner Emma Bonino encapsulated Europe’s fishing woes as “too many boats and too few fish”. She predicted that the future for coastal communities that depend on fishing was in shore-based factory jobs, processing and adding value to fish caught by super-trawlers working off-shore. In her vison of a “Blue Europe”, the days of small scale inshore fleets were numbered. In her view the future lay in an easier to manage, smaller fleet of very large vessels, catching fish more cost effectively. Hers was a “win-win” vision of improved conservation, a more profitable fleet, shore based jobs, and cheap processed fish for consumers.


Unfortunately for many coastal communities, Emma Bonino’s vision has come true, but only partially. Supertrawlers are working off-shore, but the shore based jobs have not materialised as promised. This is particularly so in Ireland where the fishing boom of the 1980s has turned into a fishing bust for many in the 2000s, with the consequent demise of coastal communities, notably in the West of Ireland, one of the areas hardest hit by the financial crisis and subsequent recession post 2008. Fish processing factories do exist, but jobs are highly seasonal and full of uncertainty, and not accessible to those who live in remote communities. Killybegs super-trawlers often prefer to land in Scotland, Denmark or Norway, closer to the fishing grounds. Landings by vessels from Northern Ireland and other UK pelagic vessels into Killybegs have ceased in recent years, adding further to uncertainties. Many people in Donegal now have to drive 150 miles to Galway to find work, or spend the week in Dublin away from their families and communities, with a consequent impact on their quality of life, and life in their communities.


Another big problem with such a vision is that it is blind to the important role fishing plays, especially small-scale fishing, in rural economies, where fishing may supplement other sources of income. Fishing also provides both full and part time sea and shore based activities, including marine and wildlife tourism, engineering and transport in remote coastal and island communities, without which such communities would not be viable. Fishing and seafaring skills are needed to provide crew for local lifeboats for example, and without sufficient job prospects people leave communities, causing the closure of schools, health services, and other amenities. For these communities, the CFP has effectively produced a few large vessels with too much fish, and caused too many small vessels, and the communities that they support and who in turn support them to struggle to make a living without sufficient fish.


The concentration of such fishing wealth in the hands of a few millionaires also skews the power relations around the negotiating table. Such unequal power is reflected in the recent decision of the Irish government to gift 87% of the 2018 mackerel quota, valued at Euros 61 million to the Killybegs mackerel millionaires. At the same time, a request from the Irish Islands Marine Resources Organization (IIMRO), that represents small scale fishers from the Irish West coast islands, for a small share of the quota, 106 tonnes, 1% of the 2017 quota increase, and 0.12% of the total Irish TAC of 86,429 for 2017, was declined.


The enormous catching capacity of super-trawlers also means that their capacity for by-catch is huge. A haul of 400 to 1,000 tonnes even with only 1 to 5% bycatch implies 4 to 50 tonnes of marine mammals, sharks, finfish and other marine life; with 10% or more, that could mean 100 tonnes or more of by-catch in a big haul. Reports from the Baltic and West Africa point to vast quantities of undeclared finfish and non-fish by-catch being hauled up in the giant nets of these vessels. The issue of by-catch is particularly worrying for French, Dutch and UK small scale fishers using handlines to catch bass in the Southern North Sea, North Bay of Biscay and Western Approaches. Spawning aggregations of bass are extremely vulnerable to such large mobile gears, and the state of bass stocks is a cause for concern to fishers, scientists, environmentalists and policy makers alike.


The monitoring and control of super-trawlers also leaves much to be desired, particularly given the huge capacity of the vessels to do a great deal of damage in a short time compared to smaller-scale operations. VMS only sends a signal every 2 hours, which means that keeping proper tabs on the positions of super-trawlers is impossible. Off the island of Aranmore in North Donegal, the crab pots of inshore fishermen are regularly carried away by trawlers. In 2016 at least 91 pots were lost worth around €7,826, and so far in 2017, equipment valued at € 24,510 has been lost. There is no mechanism through which fishers can make compensation claims or take legal action for such losses. It is considered a civil matter, and the Sea Fisheries Protection Authority (SFPA), the Naval Service, the Garda and Coastguard refuse to help. Similar reports of damaged gear and of undeclared and discarded bycatch have been received from Scotland and the North Sea.


To safeguard the rights of coastal and island communities, IIMRO has proposed an “Island Fisheries Heritage License”, to enable fishers to operate small vessels and static gears inside the 6-mile zone, subject to certain restrictions. They are calling for an inshore area within the 6-mile zone dedicated to small scale low impact fishing for vessels owned and operated by members of coastal and island communities.


There may be a future for both small scale fishing and super-trawlers, but the priority right now is to redress the huge imbalance that exists, if our fisheries are to be sustained on a fair and equitable basis, and not destroyed by super-trawlers and their ilk.


Article courtesy of Brian O'Riordan.

Monday morning market in Newlyn


With Ophelia predicted to bring the strongest winds for 50 years and blast through the waters off Cornwall and southern Ireland the hake netting fleet are all safely tucked up in port and having to queue to land...



which means they will stagger their landings over the next few days...



so as not to flood the market with hake...



even so, with less than 50% of the market hall available now due to the refurbishment space is at a premium...



what looks like a sample core is in fact the concrete market floor that was bored out to allow the grader drainage system to function...



there's plenty of work for Cefas to do over night taking fish data from the landings...



which even included a shot of scad...



along with haddock...



and for the first time in a while a run of spur dogs from both the netters...



a handful of blackjacks...



and a good shot of monk from off the Lizard...



while the Ajax managed a few big ling...



and a couple of stone crabs...



and a few boxes of good bass from the aptly named punt, Storm Petrel...



bringing a good selection of onshore fish for the start of the week...



plenty of plaice form the one beamer to land...



along with several tons of cuttles...



while young Roger on the Imogen III ...



landed his biggest shot of ray in a while with four different varieties ...



the haker Charisma had an excellent shot of hake...



that together with the Ajax's fish



filled the market space wall-to-wall...



with a good run of fish size-wise...



all of which were pulled off the market floor at speed in the incredibly mild temperature this morning...



Ajax hake filled the boxes...



tope, known locally as 'pissers', were mixed up with dogs it seems or was it the other way round...



just the odd scallop from the Sapphire II on a bed of red gurnard...



and a few boxes of octopus thrown in for good measure...



the weather has pushed in a few boats never seen oin newlyn before  including the ex-Scottish trawler, Arc Angell...



and the stern scalloper, Tjeerd Jacoba and in contrast to her crowded deck space...



a very neat  and spacious wheelhouse arrangement...



for the Dumfries registered boat...



not netting or potting for these guys today.