Recommendations to the parties managing shared fish stocks in the Northeast Atlantic

Many important catch limits  for  2021  need  to  be agreed  between the EU and  third  countries  such as  Norway,  or  through  the  North  East  Atlantic  Fisheries  Commission  (NEAFC)  coastal  states  process.  Moreover, as things currently stand, next year some of the richest fishing grounds that have until now  been managed under the EU’s CFP, will instead be under the sovereignty of the UK because they fall within  that nation’s exclusive economic zone  (EEZ). A new joint management  framework will be  required  for  around 100 stocks shared by the UK and the EU.  In the 2013 reform of the CFP, EU member states – including the UK at the time – committed to ending  overfishing by 2015 where possible and 2020 at the latest. More recently, the EU has bolstered its wider  environmental  commitments  with  the  publication  of  its  Green  Deal  for  Europe.  Meanwhile,  the  UK  government has said it wants to become a “world leader” in fisheries management following its departure  from the EU. Commitments to sustainable fishing have also been made by all parties through the adoption  of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), in particular SDG 14 on ‘life below water’. The EU, the UK  and  the  other  coastal  states  … Read more

Recommendations for the European Commission and the EU Council on the setting of Northeast Atlantic fishing opportunities for 2021

Fisheries ministers and the European Commission failed to achieve the objective of ending overfishing in  the Northeast Atlantic region, as per the 2020 deadline outlined in Article 2.2 of the CFP. In 2020, when  the transition period and legal deadline to end overfishing concluded, 46 percent of Northeast Atlantic  TACs  were  still  set  exceeding  scientific  advice  by  fisheries  ministers  in  December  2019.  Even  in  the  Commission’s  TAC  proposal  that  set  the  basis  for  these  decisions,  almost  half  of  the  proposed  TACs  exceeded scientific advice. In addition to failing to meet the CFP’s own legal deadline for achieving sustainable fisheries, these TAC decisions  do  … Read more

Turning the Tide on EU Seas with Green Recovery

The paper dives into examples of investment opportunities in an effort to illustrate how a green recovery for the oceans is possible, for instance by: Actively restoring marine ecosystems, such as rebuilding oyster reefs and fish passages in coastal dams — This can stimulate economic activities in sectors such as marine construction while increasing fish … Read more

Protecting the North Sea: Northern Danish Waters

The northern waters of the Danish North Sea extend from the west coast of the northern part of the Jutland peninsula, northwards to the Skagerrak, and westwards to the north-western banks of Little Fisher Bank and Jutland Bank (Lillefiskerbanke and Jyske Rev, respectively, in Danish). These waters cover a wide range of depths and seabed … Read more

A comparative study of key data elements in import control schemes aimed at tackling illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing in the top three seafood markets: the European Union, the United States and Japan

Import control schemes have been adopted by some market States and Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) to monitor seafood imports and curb illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. These import controls can take the form of Catch Documentation Schemes (CDS), where information on a consignment is recorded throughout the supply chain. However, other types of … Read more