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Friday 19 May 2017

Conservative manifesto fishing fail shocker!


Run-up to the Referendum - FFL flotilla off Newlyn Harbour last year


FFL's (Fishing for Leave) website is carrying this story on its front page this morning - where just four words in the Conservative manifesto have set alarm bells ringing around the coast!

Here's what FFL say:
"FFL are incredulous over 4 specific words in the Conservative manifesto which indicate the government will only take back a tiny slice of UK water out to 12 miles!
Analysis and scrutiny of every word is key in any legal or political document. One of the “acid tests” of Brexit is to take back sovereign control from the EU of all UK waters and resources within our Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) out to 200 miles or the mid-line under international law. This would allow Britain to reclaim a £6.3bn pound industry, worth tens of thousands of jobs, to rejuvenate coastal communities but the manifesto wilts on this key issue when scrutinised properly. 
Many of the commitments in the manifesto are welcome. The government has committed to “work with the industry…to introduce a new regime… that will preserve and increase stocks… to ensure prosperity for a new generation” and FFL looks forward to fully engaging to do so. However, without sovereign control of ALL waters and resources inside the EEZ all other commitments are worthless without the raw materials and the most important ingredient – regaining our waters. 


The manifesto states that the UK “will be fully responsible for the access and management of the waters where we have historically exercised sovereign control”. The choice of the last 4 words are the key. They are ambiguous and a delusory play on words. 
They don’t trip off the tongue and this peculiar yet deliberate choice of words are of dire concern and ring alarm bells for a total backslide and fudged deal. 
Why hasn’t the natural wording of “all UK waters” or perhaps “all our EEZ” been used?? 
Why? Because the UK has never been able to exercise sovereign control over our EEZ in the waters between 12 and 200 miles from our shores! The UK has only ever been able to exercised sovereign control out to 12 miles before joining the EU! 
Britain was already an EU member and bound by the CFP when international fishing limits were extended to 200 miles. The UK recognised her sovereignty over the EEZ out to 200miles, with the Fishery Limits Act of 1976, but these waters were automatically subverted to the EU which exercised sovereign control instead of the UK as per the terms of the CFP foundation Regulation 2141/1970, the terms of which, in Article 2, Section 3, said the EU would control 
“the maritime waters…. which are so described by the laws in force in each Member State”. 
Therefore, although the UK recognised her sovereignty over the EEZ, the UK has never been able to historically exercised control between 12 and 200 miles because it was automatically subverted by the EU! 
Before the UK joined the EU, Britain’s controlled fisheries up to 12 miles. This was reduced to 6 miles when the UK signed the London Fisheries Convention of 1964.
The EU adopted the terms of the London Convention and the UK Accession Treaty, Article 100 only authorised member states “to restrict fishing in waters under their sovereignty or jurisdiction, situated within a limit of six nautical miles” 
Although we welcome the manifesto commitment of finally committing to scrapping the 1964 London Fisheries Convention, that FFL alone successfully campaigned for, that only regains exclusive control back up to 12 miles once the UK leaves the CFP.
Therefore, the manifestos choice of 4 words are deliberate and indicate, as FFL has continually warned, that the government has no intention of taking back control of all our waters. Is only this to avoid being contentious to the EU as they look to build a “deep and special relationship” with their “EU friends and partners”? 
For the last 40 years the Conservatives flatter to deceive when the small print is scrutinised. FFL sincerely hope we are proved wrong. We will now tenaciously press for answers to what’s defined as “waters where we have historically exercised sovereign control” The Conservatives have got it absolutely right, that “When we leave the EU and CFP we will be fully responsible”. Responsibility will revert to Westminster for what is chosen for our waters and what areas of them, the buck stops entirely with MPs and the government. 
The Conservatives better mean all UK waters within our EEZ out to 200 miles, otherwise Brexit, the nation and the opportunity to reclaim all waters, for all fishermen and for all communities has been betrayed. Without all our waters and resources the rest of the fantastic wording of “a new regime….for prosperity for a new generation of fishermen” is meaningless and they have failed on this “acid test”."
See the FFL website for more updates or follow them on Twitter

Thursday 18 May 2017

Wonders of Cornwall - A Newlyn Documentary by Jack Edwards



Newlyn, when it is not playing home to the largest fleet of fishing boats in the UK, also provides rich pickings for anyone able to capture the richness and diversity of its visual and living cultural heritage.

Further and higher education students from near and far take advantage of the port for a wide range of reasons - from fisheries students gathering hard data and evidence for their theses, PhD students undertaking anthropological research on how fishermen are making use of social media to media students needing subjects for more creative projects - Newlyn offers them all a rich, diverse and challenging environment in which to immerse themselves for the period of their studies.

Last week, UCL masters student Lamorna Ash spent the final week of her research aboard the port's biggest trawler, Crystal Sea while this week saw nearby Penwith College media student Jack Edwards, son of well-known skipper Shaun 'Wordsy' Edwards, publish his project in the form of a video documentary featuring the port and some the characters who have helped make the place what it is.

Born in Newlyn, Jack is one of those people fully appreciative of just how lucky he is to have been raised as the son of a fishermen within the tight fishing community - hence the title, Wonders of Cornwall.

Rules of the Road


Another visitor, this time the ex-trawler now pot a boat...


someone's pulled the plug on the Jubilee Pool ahead of its grand re-opening...


nearing 7pm and the Scillonian III heads for home...


past a spiky Penzance skyline...


know your Rules of the Road - both vessels underway, one sailboat and the other a power driven vessel - who should give way to who? 

Clue: when is a sailboat not a sailboat?

Project UK Fisheries Improvements - major Seafish project


Project UK Fisheries Improvements (PUKFI) is working towards an environmentally sustainable future for UK fisheries by running Fishery Improvement Projects (FIPs) on six UK fisheries that have been selected by the UK supply chain. They were selected due to their importance for the UK market.




North Sea plaice & lemon sole, demersal trawl, beam trawl & seine



Channel scallops, dredge



Western & Channel monkfish, demersal trawl, beam trawl & gill net



Southwest crab & lobster, pots

Click on the fishery to go to its FIP site.

PUKFI will use the MSC process as a tool to develop credible FIPs, giving each fishery the tools to implement changes and to ensure their sustainable future.

Click here to learn more about credible FIPs.

To download a printable leaflet of this information click here

Exciting opportunity to assist on this project!!

There are two Masters project opportunities open for summer 2017.

Click here for the scallop project proposal
Click here for the monkfish project proposal
Click here for more details
Click here for the application form

PUKFI will use the MSC Pre-Assessment process as a gap analysis to determine current status, identify improvements and inform development of an Action Plan designed to ultimately improve the sustainability of the fishery.

The project will implement the Action Plan for each fishery and track progress through the MSC's Bench-Marking and Tracking tool (BMT). Once the individual improvement projects are completed they will be entered into MSC assessment. 

Each FIP has a steering group to inform, guide and implement the work identified. These are made up of industry, fishery managers, scientists, NGOs, retailers and supply chain. They will be chaired and facilitated by MSC. 

A PUKFI Advisory Group made up of project funders will oversee the work of the project. PUKFI is one work-stream of a larger over-arching project, Project UK, currently in development which aims to identify, improve and ultimately certify market-relevant fisheries in the UK. It will use the Project Inshore model of large-scale Pre-Assessments to identify data gaps, best practice and areas for improvement to inform FIP development and set up.

For more information please contact:

Chloe North
UK Fisheries Outreach Officer
Marine Stewardship Council
Email: chloe.north@msc.org
Tel: 020 7246 8914

Claire Pescod
Fisheries Outreach Manager UK & Ireland
Marine Stewardship Council
Email: Claire.pescod@msc.org

Wednesday 17 May 2017

Mid-week market in Newlyn.


The legacy lives on...


changing times, there are more visitors landed on the market this morning than local boats...


with the Lisa putting ashore a few boxes of scampi tails as the smallest size of monk tails are known...


while the prawn boats piled their haddock high...


there are a few good lemons still around...


and plenty of big monk tails with the beamer...


haddock and more haddock...


and a few of Roger's JDs have been caught up in the big prawn nets...


along with some sizeable plaice...


the hands...


that do the bidding...


and buying...


or wait patiently for a bargain...


all, eventually go down in Ian's little blue book...


the biggest red mullet on the market this morning...


no match for the quantity of megrim soles put ashore of course...


and more tails...


and even a handful of big JDs with the Twilight's broken trip...


work still to be completed on the Sapphire II up on the slip...


one French and one American flag-flying yacht in this morning...


time to Rejoice, well time for a major paint-up for the scalloper...


and even on a boat with a big working deck the number of paint tins soon adds up...


while across the quay the boys, a long way from home, set to with the deck wash...


and brushes scrubbing down the boat.

Tuesday 16 May 2017

Cod at the heart of the North Sea debate over access post Brexit

Some fine Cornish cod.
The Financial Times talks about a "4th cod war" in a recent article:

"Thanks to sustained efforts by the EU and Scottish fishermen, North Sea cod has moved from the danger zone to relative abundance. The Marine Stewardship Council, an independent conservation group, is soon expected to declare the stock sustainable, allowing restaurants to serve it without guilt and capping an extraordinary comeback.
The cod’s recovery has taken place under a framework of international agreements that have divided the annual catch between Norway and the EU, with the latter share apportioned again among the group’s 28 member states. But British fishermen, among the most ardent of Brexiters, are demanding those agreements be torn up when the UK leaves the bloc. Many still fume that Edward Heath effectively handed over their fish when the-then prime minister negotiated the UK’s accession to the European Economic Community, the forerunner of the EU, in 1973.
Scottish fishermen, in particular, believe they are now entitled to a much larger share of North Sea cod, based on geography and the sacrifices they made to ensure the stock’s survival.

For the full article visit the FT website.


Monday 15 May 2017

Monday morning in Newlyn


If it was warmer it would be muggy, but it isn't, so this morning it is mainly overcast and misty...



which does not affect the spirits of those inside the fish market participating in Monday morning's market with a mix of boats landing including another invisible netter with a huge trip or turbot...



the beamers landed their usual haul of megrim soles...



some heads, some tails...



and the Algrie had a good shot of Dover soles including these monsters...



while the Spirited Lady III managed a few John Dory...



and the Scottish prawner, Orion hit the haddock...



top cooking tip this morning - Saturday's St Ives Food & Drink Festival saw Mitch Tonks cook up a dish using octopus - and he explained that the species of octopus normally caught in North Atlantic waters - which have a single row of suckers as can be seen in this photo - are not suitable as, despite the efforts of many chefs, all have failed to produce a tender fleshed dish - the kind needed are those with multiple rows of suckers down their tentacles apparently...



at nearly 11kg this turbot is big enough to feed a wedding party...



a ten foot version of this would panic the most hardened swimmer...



red fish in red boxes...



good to see Cod's boat, Butts on fish tallies again...



named and dated, ray wings from team Curtiss...



pristine turbot from the mystery netter...



auctioneer Ian in full flow...



easy pickings, a good selection of paws this morning...



one punt for sale - see Boats for Sale...



come on you blues, by far the most popular colour for the Scottish fleet...



as the Bracoden pulls on her trawl again after a long night of mending...



just made it in at high water...



the transport waits for the prawns to come ashore.