New UK Fisheries Act turns back the clock on sustainable fisheries
Statement from Oceana in reaction to today’s adoption of the Fisheries Act
Press Release Date: November 23, 2020
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Emily Fairless, Communications Officer | email: efairless@oceana.org | tel.: +32 478 038 490
Oceana regrets that the Fisheries Bill, which has today received Royal Assent making it the Fisheries Act, fails to include a legal duty to fish sustainably, below Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY), for all stocks. The Fisheries Bill originally offered hope of a new gold standard for fisheries management in the UK, which could have served as an example across the globe. It could have provided a lifeline for depleted fish stocks by giving them a chance to recover. Instead, after years of progress to restore fish populations under the Common Fisheries Policy, the new Fisheries Act risks turning back the clock on UK fisheries.
“Oceana is very concerned that the Fisheries Act contains neither a strong duty to fish sustainably nor a deadline to do so. This could allow overfishing to continue or even increase in UK waters after the UK failed, under the framework of the EU, to meet the longstanding international deadline to end overfishing by 2020,” said Melissa Moore, Head of UK Policy at Oceana. “The UK will still need to work in partnership with countries bordering the North-East Atlantic to manage their over 100 shared fish stocks. The ongoing negotiations between the UK and the EU are the final chance to provide a legal commitment to follow scientific advice and fish sustainably. Oceana urges all sides to continue cooperating in pursuit of sustainable fisheries that will safeguard fish stocks for future generations.”
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Hopes for sustainable fishing flounder as Fisheries Bill passed
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