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Tuesday 2 February 2016

Seafood Champions! - Newlyn boat and crew win International 'Fishing Innovation Award' - but was it worth it?



In Malta at the International Seafood Awards, David Stevens and his crew were recognised for their immense efforts in order to minimise the effects of the Landing Obligation through the use of technology to win the Fishing Innovation Award - immense effort which has cost them real money, real time and real effort - before reading the article below take a few minutes to see what life aboard their boat is like:







SeaFood Champions Awards ~Innovation.

Last night in Malta SeaWeb held the Seafood Champions awards ceremony, the awards ceremony is held on the first night of the annual seafood summit which is a 3 day event.

The summit brings together all sides of the fishing debate, policy makers, scientists, NGO’s, fishing managers and a few Fisherman.

The topics that are discussed are always very relevant and they are designed to challenge all parties involved with fisheries and bring them together and discuss the big issues of the day.




This year we (Crystal Sea Fishing) were nominated for one of the award categories, there are 4 categories (Innovation, Leadership, Vision and Advocacy)   there were 90 nominations for the four awards this year and this was narrowed down to 16 in all, 4 for each category.

We were nominated for our work that we have been involved with over the last 4 years with the MMO as part of the CQT scheme (catch quota trials). The trials have involved fishing vessels taking remote electronic equipment on board our vessels, to monitor the health of the stocks and most importantly our impact we have on our mixed fisheries.

I have blogged before on what we have been up to and our findings, for us the most important part of what we have achieved has been proving that the fish stocks are in great health, far greater than the science ever predicted and that when fisherman are given the incentives, the right amount of quota and the flexible legislation to go about our work, we can deliver far better results.

We have also been able to build a collaborative approach with the MMO and the scientists (to a point) to use the work we have undertaken to build a very accurate picture of the effects our technical measures have had on our catches and it has given a very in depth look at the mechanisms we use and how policy adoptions could make our fisheries more reactive and deliver far better outcomes for all involved, by joining fishing, science and policy together to balance the whole approach we take.



I am proud to say that for the Innovation Category Crystal Sea Fishing have won the award! I am delighted that we have been recognised for our work and all credit goes to the crew who have done a huge amount of work over the last 4 years in enabling this data to be collected.

However lets not get carried away with patting ourselves on the back, today I don’t feel elated or have a great sense that we have achieved anything yet, we still have a lot of work to do. I am sorry I feel this way but it’s just how I feel and I am sure many other fishermen feel the same.

We are not the only ones who have undertaken scientific work and technical measures over the years, the UK fishing industry has taken on a lot of work in this area and I would say in Europe the UK leads the way in being pro-active towards its fisheries.

When I look back over the last 4 years I am reflecting on how far we have travelled, we have achieved a lot, we have proved beyond doubt that fisherman can be trusted to run fisheries and that we are the ones who are best placed to deliver the results.

Fishermen have more than delivered on our side of the bargain, to reduce discards and overall fishing mortality, and to deliver great data.

I have to ask though where has it gotten us? 

Since we have been working with the CQT scheme, our choke species is and has always been haddocks, and even though we have proved the sheer abundance of this stock in our area and that it is on a very strong upwards stock growth trend, we have faced year on year cuts of over 70% in the last 4 years.
This year we are seeing so many haddocks that even with being able to reduce our haddock catches by over 70%, we still do not have enough quota to go about our fishing practices despite having enough quota for all other species.

The work that the MMO has done with interpreting the data has been excellent and they have produced some great reports with very convincing data. They have proved how useful the REM equipment is and how it can deliver on many of the scientific challenges we face.

But who is listening?  

As yet we have not seen much movement with the scientists, who like the work and the data but they say it doesn’t fit their data collection protocols.

I can understand this, as one data set is not enough to give a full reflection of the impact of the fishery as a whole, however the data they are collecting is very small in comparison to what is needed to be done and most fisherman believe because of this, the picture the science has (from what they are seeing) does not reflect what the fisherman are experiencing on the grounds.

Then we lead onto policy, the policy makers have to follow the scientific evidence regardless of whether it is accurate or not, they then use this data and apply theoretical science to this at ICES to predict such things as to what levels to set the TAC (total allowable catch)  based on MSY principles (maximum sustainable yield).

This all relies on the accuracy and quality of the data, for most stocks I would say the science is within the ball park for this to be workable, however on the erratic recruitment stocks of which haddock is one of many I would argue that more work needs to be done in this area for sure.
They then take the data and the scientific principle add in a landings obligation and the EU then applies all of this to an out of date over arching policy of the CFP (common fisheries policy) and expects it all to work.

Well it doesn’t and if we carry on like this it never will!


The real prize here is for a fishery to be taken in the most efficient, economically advantageous way for our communities and for it to remain in continued constant good health.

For this to happen science needs to be part of what we do as fisherman, the scientists need to make best use of the data we have available and the tools we have to do this. Policy needs to recognise how to achieve this and start asking the right questions of the science and themselves, and then policy has the chance to reflect the fishery more closely, which will deliver the right outcomes.
For me this is our goal, it’s the only prize worth having, fisherman have for a long time faced the brunt of the blame for the poor policy decisions, we have been left baffled by the lack of common sense being applied to policy and we all deserve better.

As for us despite even after 4 years of ridiculous cuts which have only made our job harder and delivered no benefits to the stock, we will continue to go about our work and fully document our catches and apply the best methods of capture by use of technical innovation.

I don’t see any other choice, as fisherman we are natural optimists (you’d have to be to do this job) and burying our heads in the sand won’t solve these issues. We will go out and reverse the burden of proof and lead the way for science and policy to follow, it’s our only option.



The Landings Obligations Reality

For the last 3 years we have been involved with the UK's catch quota scheme (CQT). This has involved us carrying camera's on board our vessel and continuously recording our catches and not discarding any quota species. In year one we worked solely with haddocks, by year two we had moved onto 3 species (haddocks, Megrims and monks), this year we have been observing a full no discards on all quota species, Fully documenting our catch. We have also run an economic impact study alongside as well from the different trials of nets we have run. 

We have been lucky in that we have been able to undertake this work and make full use of the small incentives available under the CQT scheme, and for us we were more than happy to step up and prove, that if fisherman are given a reasonable chance to manage their own fishery they can really deliver a more reactive and responsive fishery. However I would stress that this should not be seen as (that’s ok landings obligation solved all vessels try this), as we all know the situation is more complicated than that. Although on the surface, the work we have done looks good, when you look deeper into what is happening then the picture that comes out doesn’t look quite so rosy.




We have had a lot of success with the adaptions we have made with our gear in eliminating juvenile haddocks, and the total capture of haddocks of all sizes. We have reduced under the MLS haddock catches by 87% and the total volume of haddocks is now well under 70% of what we would expect to see in our control nets (the gear we worked prior to the trial.) 

We have also had to use area avoidance and many nights we have been unable tow, due to volumes of haddocks still being too large for the quota we have available. This has come at a cost, we have lost our catch of whiten almost completely, our squid catch is down by half. We have been unable to work all of our grounds as well, so we haven’t always been in the best place to fish. 

Also by not towing at night from April through to October we have missed 25% of our hauls in this time period, with the resulting loss of all that fish we would have obviously taken, (megs, monks, lemons , ray, whiten Gurnard, Dover sole , and many more).There has been a fairly considerable financial loss this year, as well as a loss to the markets, of fish that we would have otherwise caught during our laying at night and area avoidance.

We have used 4 methods to reduce haddock juveniles and total haddock capture, we have cut the cover in our nets by 13 feet, we have fitted 100 mm and 120 mm regulatory SQMP, and the 100 mm SQMP in the cod end, we also fitted agitators in the stocking below the regulation panels to entice the fish through the SQMP. All of the methods have worked in differing ways to get the results, however they have their drawbacks and should be only used when conditions require it, and to skippers discretion, we don’t need these measures made law, apart from the one’s already in place.



However by working with the cameras and fully documenting our catch it has given us an insight of what the full landings obligation will look like in 2019 if its fully implemented. The one thing we can say for sure, is that if it comes in as its intended, even with the flexibility's it has built in.  There is no way we could fish all year round, and that includes the steps we have taken. We would choke on haddocks by the end of august or earlier, so although we have suffered a loss we have learned valuable lessons for the future of our business. 

Although the camera’s are primarily an enforcement tool, from our experience over the last 3 years we have found them more friend than foe. With continuously working with the cameras under the MMO’s CQT trial, we have been able to utilise the data we have captured and build a very good picture of the effects our experiments have had on our fishery, both environmentally and economically. The MMO has taken a very pragmatic approach in the way it runs the CQT scheme and this has been the biggest factor in the success of the scheme and delivering its outcomes. A simplistic approach of using the camera’s as just enforcement would not of worked at all.

Importantly for us we have seen that the data we have captured, become very useful and it is now being added into the scientific system and although it is only one data set, it is a lot of data, and we have been able to add a lot of weight to the scientific evidence. We have probably now come as far as we can in what we can achieve, for us it’s maybe too far, as we have received a fairly sizable financial loss,  we have shown that fisherman can react and improve their fishery, however there is a limit when that starts to have a large economic impact and a problem of under catching species for which they have quota available.

We hope from the work we have done that the scientist and policy makers take a closer look at the reasons why fisheries are choking too early, and react to this with a more flexible approach. There are many reasons for discards and just blaming the fisherman for the problem, as many in the NGO's, journalists and politicians, have done in the past is just not good enough. The fish that were discarded before the landing obligation was introduced were mainly over the MLS( minimum landing size), and this was due to policy, now they will become a choke species (species that will close a fishery). 

 I would say bad policy creates far more discards than so called bad fishing practices, there are many complex reasons why a species becomes a choke, for our choke (area 7 haddocks) this is a multi layered problem. Essentially from what we are seeing on the grounds I think the lack of scientific data and more importantly the way that data is collected is causing a problem with the stock estimates of this species.

Coupled with that basing the quota amounts on historical catch data records is going to have huge implications across the EU as we all know fish move, and distribution cycles have changed in the last 25 years dramatically. This is the problem for us for area 7 haddock, before 95 we hardly saw a haddock now they are everywhere. The same can be said for many species around the UK and Ireland take hake for example in the North Sea.

Also drawing lines on a chart that determine stock coverage is no way to manage a fishery, the fish follow the feed and they will pass through area's and pay no attention to imaginary lines on a map, something is needed to address this issue as well.

It’s time that the commission understood that most of our fisheries are mixed fisheries and we need a balance of quota, simply working with single stock management will never work. Also relative shares have a big impact on some species when you apply a landings obligation to a mixed fishery. For example the UK takes around 20% of the EU quota in area 7, our choke( area 7 haddock) we only have 9% of the EU allocation so when you then apply that to a mixed fishery the UK has less than half the haddock it needs to start with, the same applies for differing species across many areas and member states.
Then the future is still not quite so assured, as when we come to the uplifts instead of looking at the discard for a certain species at member state level it will be applied at EU discard rate level, so once again relative shares have not been addressed.

This approach needs a rethink, obviously relative shares are a big issue and not easily broached, and I doubt we would ever see movement in this area, so we need other options to rectify this problem. Maybe something like Norway works, like the Norwegian others system of quota amounts, could help alleviate this contentious problem or a quota currency system.

 I would say on reflection although we have lost out in what we have done financially we have learned a great deal from our experience, we have made a few mistakes along the way, that’s inevitable. 

As the landings obligation stands at present with the proposed flexibility's on the table, by 2019 the fleets in our area and probably across Europe, the fleets will be tied up by half way through the year, the supplies of fish will cease and the consequences will ripple through the entire supply chain.

This will result in unemployment, bankruptcies, losses to market share and fish supply shortages, a total disaster! 

However I hope from what we have learned policy makers can get a good grasp of what problems we will encounter and more importantly the reasons why, fisherman’s voices need to be heard more clearly in this process, we have seen first hand the impact this policy will create and it doesn't look good.

The CQT scheme has given us the ability to prove where policy and science is letting the fishery down and for the first time as fisherman we are able to reverse the burden of proof and lead the way. However the challenge now is that, we have to be able to supply even more data and trust into the system so that scientists and policy makers can apply better policies in future. 

Good news for Cornish Gill Net Hake!

A small but significant change to the certification of Cornish Gill Net Hake has been made - until now, MSC Certified Cornish Hake - fish caught and landed by named Cornish vessels using gill nets, mostly based in Newlyn could only selll their fish as MSC Certified on Newlyn fish market - this has now been extended to include both Plymouth and Devon fish markets. The fleet of gill netters often split their landings between these ports in order to lessen the impact and create a glut on a single market to limited number of buyers - so good news all round!



Cornish Hake Gill Net update to Certification:

Marine Stewardship Council Certification 

Stakeholder announcement  

The client (Cornish Fish Producers Organisation Ltd) asked for the Cornish Hake fishery certificate to be extended to the first point of sale at the fish markets in Brixham, Plymouth and Newlyn.  This required a change to sections (13.3 Points of landing and 13.4 Eligibility to enter chains of custody) of the certified operation as described in the Public Certification Report on MSC.org



There follows a summary for the attention of stakeholders. Further detail is given in the variation request posted on MSC.org (s).    

Acoura have verified the systems for provenance and traceability of all fish (MSC certified and non-certified). The assessment team and Acoura decided to grant Cornish Fish Producers Organisation Ltd (CFPO) an extension to the MSC fishery certificate until the first point of sale at the fish markets in Brixham, Plymouth and Newlyn using the following auctioneers Plymouth PTA, Brixham BTA, Newlyn WS&S. Other first points of sale are not covered by this variation and can only buy fish from the point of landing. All supply chains beyond either of the first point of sale will require MSC chain of custody certification This change will remain effective until the end of the current certification period. At each surveillance audit Acoura will check that the systems still remain effective.   

Any further enquiries should be sent in the first instance to:  
Acoura Fisheries Department  fisheries@Acoura.com   

Update on the Modern Express tow in the Bay of Biscay.




The Modern Express is currently successfully kept away from the coast, towed by the "Centaurus". The convoy was en route at a speed of 3 knots 64 km from the coast around 6 p.m. After establishing the towing connection, the team of SMIT Salvage has left the Modern Express by helicopter and was transferred onto the anti-submarine frigate Primauguet. The tug Centaurus began the towing operation at 11:45 a.m. after managing to turn the ship out to the open sea. 

The priority now was to keep the ship from the shore. The Spanish authorities that they have accepted the request of the shipowner to permit the ship to enter Bilbao where the convoy could arrive in the morning of Feb 3. 

Info courtesy of Timsen at VesselTracker:

Monday 1 February 2016

Statutory guidance Bass Fishing: Catch limits, closures and minimum size

Just published by the MMO: Bass Fishing: Catch limits, closures and minimum size

  • What rules apply to commercial fisherman
  • Where commercial bass fishing is permanently closed
  • When you can fish commercially and how much bass you can keep
  • Bass and the landing obligation
  • Capped Licences
  • Recreational fishing for bass
  • Minimum Conservation Reference Size (MCRS)
  • If you break the law
  • Further Information


If you are a commercial or recreational fisherman for bass you will need to comply with the new rules for:

where you can catch bass when you can catch bass
how many bass you can catch
minimum size you can keep

1. What rules apply to commercial fisherman The rules apply if you are a commercial fishermen and you:

target bass or catch them as a by-catch
use one of the regulated fishing gears
operate in the North Sea, Channel, South West Approaches, West of Ireland, Celtic Sea or Irish Sea 2. Where commercial bass fishing is permanently closed
You must not catch, retain (keep), tranship (transfer fish from one vessel to another while at sea) or land bass from the following areas.

Sea area

International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) division South West Approaches ICES VIIb, VIIc, VIIj and VIIk

Irish or Celtic Sea Outside the 12 nautical mile limit of ICES VIIg and VIIa

3. When you can fish commercially and how much bass you can keep From 1 January 2016 to 30 June 2016 you may only use certain fishing methods to fish for or retain bass as a by-catch. The quantity of bass you can keep is subject to limits and these are described in the table below.

You may only retain bass during February and March if fishing with demersal trawls and seines when up to 1 per cent of the catch retained on board at any time may be bass. You may not keep any bass caught using other fishing methods in these months; it must be discarded.

3.1 1 January 2016 to 30 June 2016 (inclusive)

Sea Area ICES Division Demersal trawls and seines Fixed Nets, Hooks and lines All other gear types (including drift nets)

North Sea IVb, IVc Up to 1% bass by-catch 1,300kg bass per vessel per month except February and March All bass catches prohibited

Channel VIId, VIIe Up to 1% bass by-catch 1,300kg bass per vessel per month except February and March All bass catches prohibited

Celtic Sea VIIf, VIIg* Up to 1% bass by-catch 1,300kg bass per vessel per month except February and March All bass catches prohibited

Irish Sea VIIa* Up to 1% bass by-catch 1,300kg bass per vessel per month except February and March All bass catches prohibited

South West Approaches VIIh Up to 1% bass by-catch 1,300kg bass per vessel per month except February and March All bass catches prohibited

* Inside 12nm limit only

From 1 July 2016 to 31 December 2016 you may fish for bass subject to catch limits. Depending on the subject to the limits in the table below.

Commercial fishing restrictions map 1 January 2016 to 30 June 2016.

3.2 1 July 2016 to 31 December 2016 (inclusive)

Sea Area ICES Division Demersal trawls and seines Fixed Nets, Hooks and lines All other gear types (including drift nets)

North Sea IVb, IVc 1,000kg bass per vessel per month 1,300kg bass per vessel per month 1,000kg bass per vessel per month

Channel VIId, VIIe 1,000kg bass per vessel per month 1,300kg bass per vessel per month 1,000kg bass per vessel per month

Celtic Sea VIIf, VIIg* 1,000kg bass per vessel per month 1,300kg bass per vessel per month 1,000kg bass per vessel per month

Irish Sea VIIa* 1,000kg bass per vessel per month 1,300kg bass per vessel per month 1,000kg bass per vessel per month

South West Approaches VIIh 1,000kg bass per vessel per month 1,300kg bass per vessel per month 1,000kg bass per vessel per month

* Inside 12nm limit only

All bass that you catch from each area will count towards your monthly total catch limit. If you fish in more than one area, you must combine the catches and the total quantity of bass retained must not exceed the monthly limit.

If you use different gear during a calendar month then the lowest catch limit for that fishing gear applies. For example, if you use fixed gill nets and a demersal trawl during July, the maximum permitted catch for your vessel is 1,000kg.

The catch limit applies to a single vessel - you can’t transfer it between vessels.

4. Bass and the landing obligation

This applies to commercial fisheries. Bass is subject to catch limits and therefore the landing obligation (“discards ban”) applies.

If you target pelagic fisheries with pelagic gear then you must land all the bass caught unless you are operating in an area where commercial fishing for bass is prohibited, in which case you may not keep any bass caught; it must be discarded.

Further information on the pelagic landing obligation.

The demersal landing obligation is being gradually brought in. The demersal landing obligation does not currently apply to bass in 2016. It will apply to bass in all fisheries no later than 2019.

5. Capped Licences

If you have a capped licence you are subject to the prohibitions, by-catch restrictions and the monthly bass catch limits outlined above.

6. Recreational fishing for bass

If you are a recreational fisherman in the North Sea and Western waters you are subject to the limitations below:

Sea Area ICES Division 1 January 2016 to 30 June 2016 1 July 2016 to 31 December

North Sea IVb, IVc Catch and release only 1 bass per fisherman per day

East Channel VIId, VIIe Catch and release only 1 bass per fisherman per day

Celtic Sea VIIf, VIIg Catch and release only 1 bass per fisherman per day

Irish Sea VIIa Catch and release only 1 bass per fisherman per day

South West Approaches VIIh Catch and release only 1 bass per fisherman per day

West of Ireland VIIj, VIIk 1 bass per fisherman per day 1 bass per fisherman per day

This applies whether you are fishing from a vessel or from the shore.

7. Minimum Conservation Reference Size (MCRS)

The MCRS for bass is 42cm.

You must not retain, tranship, land, transport, store, sell, display or offer for sale specimens below the MCRS, but must return them immediately to the sea.

The landing obligation may require you to land all the bass caught during fishing operations.

8. If you break the law You can be fined or prosecuted if you don’t follow the rules.

Read the Marine Management Organisation’s (MMO) compliance and enforcement strategy.

Penalties

You can be given a penalty if you admit or are found guilty of an offence.

A court may:

give you an unlimited fine
order the confiscation of your fish or give you a fine to the value of the fish
order the confiscation of your fishing gear

The MMO may offer you an administrative penalty up to a maximum of £10,000 instead of going to court. Read the financial administrative penalties for fisheries offences for more information.



9. Further Information Council Regulation 

(EU) 2016/72 of 22 January 2016 fixing for 2016 the fishing opportunities for certain fish stocks and groups of fish stocks, applicable in Union waters and, for Union fishing vessels, in certain non-Union waters, and amending Regulation (EU) 2015/104

Published 1 February 2016

Taking a punt on the fish in the Bay.


Every now and then when the weather pushes in strong winds and a big ground sea from the west it pays to have a look in the Bay for big white fish...


Just a few of the 500kg of spurdogs caught and dumped today by the Govenek of Ladram

but by the end of play today, the Govenek of Ladram had amassed around a half a ton of spurdogs - not the best fish to have mixed in with the rest of your haul when there is a moratorium on landing these fish!

Catches of spurdogs have been steadily rising right around the English coastline in recent years and fishermen are quite rightly wondering when some sort of sensible landing policy will be agreed before the tonnage being dumped becomes untenable.

What grieves the boats most is the lack of serious data on the spread of these fish - as there is a complete ban on landing even a single fish there are no landing records to compute.


Gary, from Cefas collecting landing data on Newlyn market - one time port record holder Boy Gary was named after him.

Over the years Nelwyn has seen some huge landings of dogs - at one time the port record which stood at £37,500 was held by the 36ft tosher Boy Gary from fishing on spurdogs...


For a while the traditional aluminium kits were replaced with plastic ones for the very largest sizes of white fish like dogs, cod, conger, pollack, coley,  ling and ray which were deemed not to require more gentle handling.


with the weather barely above freezing at the time and the fish market short of 10 stone (62kg) kits... 



many of the fish landed were left in 10st piles on the quay and auctioned off as they were. 



#Storm Henry heads for Scotland.

Image courtesy of EarthNull.org
Henry the 1st is just beginning to threaten the west coast of Scotland - not the best day to be out at Rockall...



- not with this given out at the two o'clock forecast..



things were already buzzing at the Butt of Lewis around 1pm!

"They call it Stormy Monday, but Tuesdays' just the same"




It's dark and dismal outside but with some fish on the market the buyers are looking more cheerful this morning...



though the mix of fish is fairly restricted as the only boats to land any quantity are two of the big netters and their whitefish trips of blackjacks...



even a few big huss...



enough to concentrate the minds...



of an attentive audience...



these guys will go for top dollar this morning...



ID this fish...



a box of pouting gets the Cefas treatment...



that cod is longer then a 7st (45Kg) bpx...



with its huge gill plates and gills needed to get as much O2 in its circulatory system as possible...



the Govenek of Ladram had fished in the Bristol Channel for these fish alongside the Joy and Karen of Ladram...



all set for tomorrow's auction...



an entire fleet in a box...



Crystal Sea II ready to land...



let's hope she stays put for a good while yet...

And to end this morning on a high note, before the weather blows all the fleet back in again - probably the best version of this blues standard, from 1965 - one for you Gibson fans - a triple pickup Black Beauty at its best in the hands of God.