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Monday 19 March 2018

Monday morning fish auction in Newlyn


Joy of Ladram riding high in Newlyn at high water...


with the town under a dusting of fresh snow this morning...


there were just two net boats that landed hake...


along with a mixed selection of flats like these Dover soles...


and whole monk form the visiting Scottish prawn trawler, Asteria...


she also landed this tidy run of cod from the banks west of the Scillys...


and a smattering of other fish like these John Dory...


megrim sole...


and haddock...


there were a good selection of monk tails too...


while the fridge held a few boxes of overnight herring...


Cornish sardines...


and a good run of mackerel from a few St Ives boats...


also in the fridge white fish and hake from the netter Britannia V that had just landed at first light...


with some of her fish going straight to the morning auction...


the rest were still being winched ashore...


and taken to the cold store...


still an unusual sight in the far south west...


electric up-and-over doors have now been fitted to the new market...


no sign of the sun today as the temperature drops below freezing...


though it's unlikely cold enough to see any icebergs...


on a calm morning like this...


the local gigs won't be moving out today for training...


nor will Fishing News nominee, Dennis Pascoe's Sprigs of Heather...


this guy is looking pretty glum too...


the only pair of legs currently walking on the pontoon...


undoubtedly in Cornwall...


looks like Butts won't be going anywhere today either...


despite the addition of this simple set of moveable steps to make getting on and off his boat much safer for him...


nor Mr Stevens who is no doubt still celebrating Ireland's dramatic final game to win this year's Six Nations...


most of the fleet are laying quietly in their berths...


no doubt the Red Lion will serve plenty of its famous crab soup today...



a sea of masts...


let's keep these scores as low as possible...


work still to do on the Billy Rowney.

Reaction from Scotland over Brexit transition deal today.

So far the only response in the media to the fishing deal struck bewteen the UK and the EU has come form north of the border - we will have to wait and see what the NFFO and the English POs around the country have to say!


David Davis and Michel Barnier have announced the agreement of a post-Brexit transition period, but the EU has warned that further work on the status of Northern Ireland is required before it can come into force. The deal announced in Brussels provoked anger from the UK fishing industry, which will be subject to EU quotas throughout the 21-month transition period without British representation in setting quotas. Fishing industry leaders accused the UK Government of trading away sovereignty over British waters during the transition phase, and Nicola Sturgeon leaped on what she called a "massive sellout" by the Conservatives. 

In a joint press conference, Mr Davis hailed the agreement as confirmation that the UK could negotiate its own trade deals during the transition, which can be signed and implement the moment the 21-month period ends. Despite being shorter than requested by the UK Government, Mr Davis said the implementation period ending in December 2020, was "near enough the two years we asked for". 

In a major concession by the UK, Mr Barnier said that there had been "complete agreement" on future citizens' rights, including that EU citizens arriving in the UK during the transition period will be eligible for permanent residence on existing terms. "British citizens and European citizens of the 27 who arrive during that transition period will receive the same rights and guarantees as those who arrived before the day of Brexit," he said. 

Responding to the announcement on fishing, Scottish Fishermen’s Federation chief executive Bertie Armstrong said: “This falls far short of an acceptable deal. We will leave the EU and leave the CFP, but hand back sovereignty over our seas a few seconds later. "Our fishing communities’ fortunes will still be subject to the whim and largesse of the EU for another two years. “Put simply, we do not trust them to look after us. So we issue this warning to the EU: be careful what you do or the consequences later will be severe. To our politicians we say this: some have tried to secure a better deal but our governments have let us down. “As a consequence, we expect a written, cast iron guarantee that after the implementation period, sovereignty will mean sovereignty and we will not enter into any deal which gives any other nation or the EU continued rights of access or quota other than those negotiated as part of the annual Coastal States negotiations.” 

Ms Sturgeon tweeted: "This is shaping up to be a massive sellout of the Scottish fishing industry by the Tories. The promises that were made to them during #EUref and since are already being broken - as many of us warned they would be."

Read more at: https://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/fishing-industry-s-anger-as-uk-and-eu-strike-brexit-transition-deal-1-4708266

Two takes on the impending crisis for the future of the industry.

The workforce of a Nissan plant in Sunderland is equivalent to 60 per cent of the full-time fishing industry


The first article by Alex Massie writing as CapX:




-The catch in taking back control of British fishing-

If the UK must 'sell out' any industry then fishing is a good industry to choose.

The decline of British fishing predates membership of the EU

The great thing about Brexit is the opportunity it offers for betrayal. The revolution must be pure and no back-sliding is permitted. Hence the increasingly hysterical tone adopted by the bravest Brexiteers. Consider, for instance, the furious rows that lie ahead when it comes to the question of the future of the British fishing fleet.

This week the European Council’s draft Brexit proposals asked for “existing reciprocal access to fishing waters” to be maintained as part of any EU-UK Brexit deal. Just look at the state — and the cheek — of that. What British prime minister worth his or her salt could possibly agree to such a demand? Once again, you see, Britain’s fishermen face the galling prospect of being sold-out by their own government. It happened, according to mythic lore, when this country first joined the European project and it will happen again now that we are leaving it.

And, to be fair, the industry and its champions have a point. Like many betrayals, this one has been hiding in plain sight. The government’s White Paper on Brexit argued that, “given the heavy reliance on UK waters of the EU fishing industry and the importance of EU waters to the UK, it is in both our interests to reach a mutually beneficial deal that works for the UK and the EU’s fishing communities”.

In her Mansion House speech May allowed that although “the UK will regain control over our domestic fisheries management rules and access to our waters” as “part of our economic partnership we will want to continue to work together to manage shared stocks in a sustainable way and to agree reciprocal access to waters”. Just in case there was any doubt, Defra’s own Brexit paper insisted that “alongside rights” the UK “will also have obligations as an independent coastal state to operate with other Coastal States on the management of shared stocks”.

The government, then, could hardly have been plainer or clearer. The UK will look to strike a deal that will reduce but not eliminate foreign vessels’ access to British waters. In return, UK boats will still be able to fish in EU waters. Granted, this is a better deal for the EU than for the UK since the value of fish caught by European boats in UK waters is at least five times greater than the value of euro-fish landed by the British fishing fleet. No wonder the fishermen are firmly of the view that no deal is considerably better than a bad deal; no wonder they also consider any deal a bad deal.


But if we must “sell-out” any industry for the sake of an easier and more prosperous post-Brexit future then fishing is a good industry to choose. Possibly, indeed, the very best one that could be selected.

It is generally accepted that joining the European project was a disaster for the British fishing industry and like many generally accepted truths this one tells only a small part of the story. The truth, astonishingly, is more complicated.

It is true that in 1948 there were almost 40,000 full-time fishermen in the United Kingdom and that the industry has declined to the extent that there are now fewer than 10,000 people earning a full-time living from fishing. Most of that decline, however, occurred before the UK even joined the European Union. In 1975 there were 17,000 fishermen, a figure that fell to 10,000 in 2003 and has since stabilised.

Onshore processing and distribution increases the importance of fishing as an industry but it is impossible to ignore the fact that a single Nissan plant in Sunderland is, as an employment matter, equal to 60 per cent of the UK full-time fishing industry. As a matter of cold, hard, brutal, fact the UK doesn’t need a fishing industry and its contribution to the nation’s economic output is, if not quite negligible, far from economically important.

The industry is important in towns such as Peterhead, Fraserburgh and Grimsby but its true significance is emotional and psychological more than it is economic. The fishing fleet speaks to Britain’s sense of itself as a maritime nation. The little boats — though many of them are actually multi-million pound vessels these days — are part of what makes us who we are; no foreigner shall dare to curb their rights of passage. The fishing-boat-bobbing seas are our seas.

In truth, however, fish are citizens of nowhere and if the fishing industry had its way there’d be markedly fewer fish in the ocean to begin with. Without government intervention, the industry would have cheerfully fished itself out of a future. Give a man a fish and he may eat for a day; agree a science-based system of quotas and he may yet fish for a lifetime.

In any case, Brexit necessarily requires compromise. Those Remainers who despair at the manner in which the government sometimes seems to have been captured by hardline Brexiteers might pause to reflect on the manner in which those same Brexit ultras are busy writing a narrative of betrayal when it comes to the fishing industry.

Far from being a betrayal, Michael Gove’s proposals for an ongoing arrangement that, while beneficial to the British fleet, still offers the continentals something of what they want should be understood as welcome evidence of Brexit pragmatism. As was the case in the 1970s, conceding on fishing allows the UK to take advantage of opportunities elsewhere in industries that are manifestly more important to this country’s prosperity than fishing. That is, in fact, almost every other industry you can think of.

This, in other words, is no time to be having your fish and eating it, and not just because doing so means there may be no more fish tomorrow anyway.


Full article courtesy of Alex Massie @alexmassie

Elsewhere on CapX
Alex Massie: The catch in taking back control of British fishing

The entire industry needs to talk.

The second article by David Scullion at Brexit Central:




-We’ll be caught hook, line, and sinker if we don’t exclude fishing from the transition deal-


Recent media reports have suggested that the British Government is willing to concede that the EU’s share of British fish will remain unchanged after March 2019. Campaign group Fishing for Leave branded the idea “a pitiful, disgusting, abject surrender and capitulation to EU demands” and the Scottish Fishermen’s Federation warned that accepting the CFP during the whole transition period would mean taking part in the December 2018 negotiations setting quotas for the whole EU. 

But why would this be an issue? And why is there so much anger towards EU policy? 

The Common Fisheries Policy is essentially a set of regulations for managing European fishing fleets. It gives all EU fleets equal access to EU waters and fishing grounds, making no distinction between the waters of each member state. Britain signed up to it when we joined the EEC in 1973, handing over our waters to become a ‘common resource’. Every year, the EU negotiates with Denmark, Iceland, Norway and Russia, all members of the North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission, to determine how much of each species should be caught by each nation. Under NEAFC, countries are allocated different amounts of fish that they are allowed to catch within certain zones. 

This system exists because the fishing zones, like shoals of fish, cross national borders. On the rare occasion that a zone exists completely within the sovereign waters of a nation, the nation has the exclusive right to that zone and is not bound by any quotas. For example, the Bristol Channel (Division VII) is entirely within the 200-mile sea limit that the UK can legally claim after Brexit. After Brexit, the UK will be under no obligation to share any fish from the Bristol Channel area, unless it felt it lacked capacity. 

At present, the EU negotiates internationally as if it were one nation and then divides up the quotas it has secured between its member states. But this is often based on out-of-date statistics. For example In East Anglia and Kent, small boats see an abundance of Sole fish but have little quota. Further north, Sole is very rare but fishermen have a huge quota which is then wasted.

The British fishing fleet has suffered a great deal under this system. Trawlers from the EU currently take around 750,000 tonnes of fish from UK waters each year, with a processed value of around £4 billion. This amounts to around 55% of the total catch of EU vessels. From 1995 to 2005 the number of British fishing boats fell from 8,073 to 6,716 and the number of fishermen fell by over a third. The seas around the UK are diverse; various types of fish are often located in the same area. This makes it very hard for fishermen to catch the fish to which they have a quota, even with specialised nets. This leads to what is call ‘choke species’ in which the quota of an undesirable fish is used up whilst a boat is fishing for something else. 

In the West of Scotland, fishermen are not allowed to catch Cod and only a very small amount of Whiting, despite there being a huge abundance of both types. Due to a discard ban coming into force next year, fishermen will have three options if they inadvertently catch the wrong type of fish: land them legally and pay a fine, land them secretly and risk arrest, or throw them back into the sea, which will soon be illegal. Fishermen would be forced to falsify records just to stay in business. But recording false information about what was caught and where leads to misinformation about fishing stocks, making the quota system worse.

Fishing Zones in the North Atlantic

At best, the Government has shown lukewarm support for UK fishermen and it had been unclear how closely ministers wish to remain aligned to the system both during any implementation period and afterwards. In her Mansion House Speech, Theresa May called for “reciprocal access to waters” and a “fairer allocation of fishing opportunities”. Being generous, this language could conceivably be interpreted favourably by Brexiteers. George Eustice, the Leave-backing fisheries minister, had made positive noises by hinting that the UK would join NEAFC as a separate, sovereign member. “Reciprocal access to waters” in the context of NEAFC would mean Britain would have the power to exchange our quotas for fish that British people don’t eat or are less well equipped to catch, in exchange for the fish that has a high market value in the UK.

Theresa May called for a ‘fairer allocation’ of fish

But at Mansion House, the Prime Minister was talking about allowing fishing access for the EU, not in a general sense, or in a way that saw the EU as just another coastal state. She said the EU wanted an unprecedented level of access to our fishing waters, but failed to challenge the demand. Instead she used it as a reason for the UK gaining an unprecedented level of EU market access. May’s call for a “fairer allocation” sounded like a renegotiation of the CFP and implied the government was considering an associate form of the Common Fisheries Policy as part of the final deal. 

Keeping an associate form of CFP would be disastrous, but there are concerns that the EU could use two points of international law to permanently damage the UK’s capacity to fish if we stayed in during the next few years. The first is the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). Article 62.2 of UNCLOS states that an independent coastal state must work out what capacity it has to fish everything it is allowed to, based on what was agreed internationally. If it cannot process everything itself, it must allow other nations to catch the surplus. Since 55% of the total catch of EU vessels is in British waters, the EU will almost certainly demand access. However, EU boats could gain much higher access after Brexit if it used the CFP to decimate the UK fleet in the next few years. 

Fishing for Leave suggest the UK could force foreign vessels to pay a levy and land their catch in Britain if this Article were invoked, but the damage to the industry if inside the CFP during the next three years would already have been done. 

The other point of law that concerns the industry is the Vienna Convention on the law of Treaties (1969) which says: “The termination of a treaty does not affect any rights, obligations or legal situations created through the treaty…. unless the treaty otherwise provides, or the parties otherwise agree”. Presently the EU has a huge stake in British waters and therefore could have used the Vienna Convention to argue that Britain was taking away historic rights and obligations with the termination of the EU treaties. However, since Britain used Article 50 to withdraw, which states that for the member state wishing to leave, “the treaties will cease to apply”, the EU has already agreed to renounce control over British waters. By including Fisheries in the transition, the UK would have to go through the new agreement with a fine tooth comb, ensuring that the EU had unequivocally relinquished any past or future claim it had to fish within British waters. If the UK failed to do so, the EU could conceivably maintain free access by claiming the termination of the withdrawal treaty affected their right to fish. 

Despite the fact that the UK has, to all intents and purposes, agreed to remain inside the Single Market during a transition period does not mean that fisheries must be included. Iceland and Norway have virtually full access to the Single Market as part of their EEA arrangements but retain full independence over their fishing waters. Sheryll Murray MP, who represents fishing communities in Cornwall South East, said an optimal solution would be withdrawal from the policy entirely in March 2019 but is prepared to accept leaving in March 2019 but honouring the 2019 quotas in that year. She’s clear that from 1st January 2020 the UK must have full sovereign control of our 200 mile waters to avoid being part of the new quota negotiations. 

Some might argue that it would be too difficult to scrap the CFP and replace it with a British system between now and March 2019, but there is potentially huge bureaucratic headache, whatever we decide to do. The CFP takes its authority from the EU treaties which apply to member states only and since Britain would technically be a third country, it is unclear how the EU would proceed. If we maintained a shadow form of CFP, it’s possible that references to the European Commission, European Parliament, and the Council of Ministers would have to be removed and equivalent bodies would have to be created in the UK in order to shadow CFP regulations. 

Publicly, DEFRA has maintained up to this point that the CFP being part of a Brexit transition is a matter for negotiation. However, privately, a senior civil servant conceded to representatives of the fishing industry last month that it would be included in the transition, telling them: “everything was in” and “if not, we are putting ourselves in”. Afterwards a DEFRA spokeswoman said the civil servant in question was wrong to suggest that CFP would be in the transition and stressed that it was still a matter for negotiation, but the remarks do lend weight to the idea that the civil service never intended to exclude fish from the transition. Brexiteers are livid with the idea of being sucked into joint EU sovereignty on one of the defining aspects of Brexit and are extremely wary of a transitional arrangement. 

It remains to be seen how Theresa May will handle a potential rebellion from backbenchers if the UK does indeed roll over on fishing.

Article courtesy of BrexitCentral:

Sunday 18 March 2018

Snow hits Newlyn again!


True to the forecast yet another...


Beast from the East swept across the South West...


not want the boys on the Asteria, the first of this season's Scottish prawn trawlers to arrive, would have been expecting at this time of year...


fingers crossed...


that the local fleet won't have to endure this sort of weather...


nor the local, rather disgruntled, young gull population...


as the snowflakes blast past the lighthouse...


and the fleet...


giving the normally sub-tropical Nelwlyn a somewhat Nordic feel...


this evening as the latest crabber to join the Rowse fleet nears completion, her new set of pots ready and waiting on the quayside....


and some of the Stevenson fleet ready for their next trips...


nets and pots at the ready...


the Amanda of Ladram will be setting sail tomorrow...


along with the crabber, Harriet Eve...


Ivan Ellen can stay where she is of course on the 50th anniversary of the ecological Torrey Canyon disaster.

Saturday 17 March 2018

The next Newlyn Archive Open day March 24th.

Here's whats in store for the next Newlyn Archive Open Day later this month.

The lifeboat Elizabeth and Blanche 2 returns to Newlyn Harbour after the rescue of the full crew of 13 men from the Norwegian barque, Saluto, which was blown ashore near Porthleven on December 13, 1911. This is one of many stories told at the next Newlyn Archive Open Day on Saturday 24 March 2018 at Trinity Centre Newlyn.



Alfred J Kliskey in Looking Back by a Newlyn Towner (See NA2585) wrote that it was the most severe storm he had ever witnessed. ‘It was a strong South Westerly gale and as I was going to work along the road near the lifeboat house, I heard a Mr Stevenson say that “If the lifeboat is needed today, she will not be able to go out of the harbour mouth for the sea is coming over green”, meaning that not only spray, but the sea itself was coming over the South Pier. I did not go to work that day, for soon after the rocket was heard, a signal to assemble the crew to the lifeboat house.’

Alfred’s brother William took his absent father’s place on the lifeboat and later recounted the story. He was the youngest member of a lifeboat crew up to that time. Here is his story.

‘…we got clear of the pier-head but could see nothing, the waves were so big. After a while, and when the lifeboat was on the crest of a wave, they saw the vessel out in the bay being driven broadside before the wind, with her sails in ribbons. As we approached her, the coxswain had to decide how he could take off the crew. If he went to the windward side he was afraid the lifeboat would be thrown on top of the drifting ship, so he decided to get as close as possible to the lee side. He ordered every man to take his oar to fend off from the ship’s side, but when it was tried, every oar snapped off like match sticks. So that manoeuvre failed. It was then decided to make round about trips and get as close as possible to the ship’s side. The coxswain would shout through his megaphone when he wished the ship’s crew to jump. At the first trial, some landed in the lifeboat; others fell into the water but were hauled aboard the lifeboat by ropes thrown to them. After four or five trips all the ship’s crew were taken off, and they made for home.’

The photo shows the arrival of the triumphant lifeboat at Newlyn’s North Pier where the Salvation Army Band played welcoming music and the crowds cheered.

PUT THE DATE IN YOUR DIARY: RESCUE AT SEA, SATURDAY MARCH 24, 2018, 10.00-3.00, AT TRINITY CENTRE NEWLYN.

THE POSTER IS AVAILABLE BELOW TO DOWNLOAD

Good Fish Guide - latest fish ratings out today


MCS has updated its online Good Fish Guide with some exciting new additions to its green rated ‘Best Choice’ list.

MSC Certified Cornish hake is recommended as an alternative to cod.

By choosing from a wider range, we’ll be putting far less stress on individual fisheries

Megrim from Rockall, Northern North Sea and West of Scotland; North Sea line and trap-caught or UK farmed turbot; line-caught pollack from the Celtic Sea; lemon sole, seine netted from the North Sea and eastern English Channel and queen scallop, traditionally caught in the Fal Estuary in Cornwall, are all now on the Good Fish Guide green-rated Best Choice List.

Getting onto that list is good news for any fishery because it identifies fish from these fisheries as the best choices a consumer or buyer can make to increase the sustainability of their purchases. 

As the UK prepares to leave the EU and fisheries talks get underway to try to secure us a bigger share of the fish post Brexit, MCS says now is the time to swap the traditional UK top five favourite fish for new choices.

“We’re suggesting that dab, hake, herring, mussels and mackerel become the new cod, haddock, salmon, prawns and tuna. By choosing from a wider range we’ll be putting far less stress on individual fisheries,” says Bernadette Clarke, MCS Good Fish Guide Programme Manager, who suggests a post-Brexit UK Top 10 which includes great tasting fish that aren’t a household name - yet.


The MCS, post Brexit, Best Choice Top 10

  • Dab, seine netted in the North Sea
  • Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) Certified hake from Cornwall
  • MSC certified herring from Irish, Celtic and North Seas, SW Ireland and Eastern English Channel
  • Mackerel, handlined in the southwest of England, and MINSA (Mackerel Industry Northern Sustainability Alliance) North East Atlantic MSC certified
  • Megrim from the Northern North Sea and West of Scotland
  • UK rope-grown mussels
  • Brown crab from Devon Inshore Potting Area, Western Channel
  • Queen scallops from the Fal Estuary, fished by traditional sail and oar method
  • Pollack handlined from the Celtic sea
  • Sole, Dover from the Western Channel

MCS says that there are some very good reasons for going local aside from complicated economics: lower food miles and carbon footprint; fresh fish can be tastier and better quality; good for the local economy; more choices; better traceability so you get what you pay for.

“We are currently exporting around 75% of fish caught and landed in the UK, but we’re the ninth largest importer of fish in the world with around 70% of the seafood value entering the UK fish supply chain coming from overseas. By choosing more sustainable sources and keeping it local it will help reduce wasting wild caught fish that are discarded dead because they have less value,” says Bernadette Clarke.

Sardines are in!
In the latest Good Fish Guide updates, MSC certified brown crab from both Shetland and Orkney, MSC certified sardine ring-netted in Cornwall and harpooned swordfish all move off the Best Choice list. Green listed non-movers this time around include Pacific halibut, mackerel and organic farmed Atlantic salmon. 

At the other end of the scale is the red rated, Fish to Avoid list. Fisheries moving onto the red list include ones for red mullet, nursehound, cuckoo, spotted and roker ray species, wild seabass from Biscay and Atlantic bigeye.  

Stunning looking undulate ray

Improving and off the red list are undulate ray from the English Channel; albacore from the Mediterranean and bigeye from western central Pacific Ocean.  Non-movers on the red list are wild seabass; skate; shark; spurdog and wild Atlantic salmon.  

“For many years MCS has been advocating consumers diversify the types of fish they eat and so relieve demand for traditional or more popular species such as cod and haddock. Although the health benefits of eating fish is well recognised and Government advice from the Food Standards Agency has been to eat at least two portions of fish a week, including a portion of oily fish, the Agency also recognises since 2010, the importance of eating a wide variety of fish and fish from sustainable sources,” said Bernadette Clarke.

Clara Govier, Head of Charities at People’s Postcode Lottery says: “It is great to see consumers using their power by making the right choices on which seafood to eat. However you access it, the Good Fish Guide gives instant advice on what to eat and how to cook it, whether you’re shopping for the family in the supermarket or looking for a place to eat out. I’m delighted that players of People’s Postcode Lottery are able to support this initiative.”

The MCS Good Fish Guide Fish is available here, as an app on iPhone or android, and paper credit card sized version – the Pocket Good Fish Guide.