Report | January 29, 2026

EU Common Fisheries Policy regulation in practice: lessons from Cypriot fishers

The EU’s Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) aims to ensure environmentally sustainable fisheries as the precondition for delivering economic, social, and employment benefits. Its success depends on effective implementation and enforcement by Member States.

With the European Commission’s 2026 evaluation of the CFP regulation, and the Republic of Cyprus holding the EU Council Presidency in the first semester of 2026, understanding local implementation, control, and enforcement challenges is vital. Cyprus, an EU member since 2004, is the third‑largest Mediterranean island facing pressures common to the region: accelerated climate warming, shifts in native marine species and rapidly spreading invasive ones, a history of overfishing, and a declining traditional commercial sector, despite Cypriot Minister of Agriculture, Rural Development and Environment’s commitment to CFP implementation and compliance.

This report draws on surveys of 47 commercial fishers in Cyprus – those most directly affected by the CFP regulation – to assess where measures work, where they fall short, and how gaps in national implementation, control, and enforcement affect the achievement of CFP objectives in practice.