World's Fifth Largest Fishing Power Makes Historic Move to Protect Fisheries
Η ΑΟΖ της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης, είναι χαραγμένη σύμφωνα με το διεθνές δίκαιο και τις ελληνικές θέσεις!
Andrew Sharpless and Ted Danson
Last week the European Union, the world's fifth largest fishing power,
made a historic move to protect its threatened fisheries as members of
the European Parliament (MEPs) overwhelmingly voted to overhaul the
Common Fisheries Policy (CFP).
The overarching legislation for fishing in the EU,
the CFP has an enormous influence over a large part of the world's
fisheries. European boats catch more than 6.3 million tons of fish every
year (almost 4.5 percent of the total fish caught, by weight,
worldwide) and comprise a fleet of tens of thousands of fishing boats.
Not to mention, the European Union is also the number one importer of
fish products in the world. Despite its intentions, however, the current
legislation is broken and demands overhaul if EU fisheries are to ever
rebound.
If a final agreement is made in June, the new law will be aggressive in
ensuring that catch levels (of fish stocks) are set according to the
Maximum Sustainable Yield by 2015, so fish stocks can be rebuilt. It
will also put an end to the wasteful practice of discards, put Europe on
a path to low-impact fishing and set up a network of fish stock
recovery areas.
The CFP is a necessary piece of legislation as it manages catch quotas,
sets subsidy rules and governs all other aspects of fisheries management
in the 27 states that make up the union. With member states sharing mutual access to
European fishing grounds, a common policy is necessary to ensure
consistent, fair play throughout EU waters. But the original policy,
which was last reformed in 2002, has failed to bring about the change
needed to protect the oceans and the best interest of the fishing
industry. Ten years later, total catch is declining (nearly
29 percent less in 2010 than it was in 2001), subsidies are encouraging
overfishing by fueling the business of excess vessels and the future
European fisheries hang in the balance.
Mindful of the many shortcomings of the existing policy, Oceana and its
allies have been campaigning for major changes over the past 20 months
in order to protect the natural environment and to ensure that fish
stocks are maximized in order to sustainably feed as many people as
possible.
One of the most notable amendments of this comprehensive reform is the
move to enforce a strong EU wide ban on discards -- the act of dumping
unintentional or surplus catch overboard before being landed. According
to EU fisheries commissioner, Maria Damanaki, almost one quarter of
all fish caught are currently being dumped at sea. This amounts to
unnecessary environmental degradation and a waste of valuable resources
that these countries will never recover.
Reforming the policies that govern EU fishing has never been more
important than it is now - for the health of the oceans the economies
that depend on them. European fisheries are so depleted that in several
Member States it has been estimated that the cost of fishing to the
public exceedsthe
total value of the catches. That means that they're spending more money
to keep the industry afloat than they receive from the resulting catch
itself.
This trend will only continue unless the serious reforms set forth by
Parliament's vote are completely ratified. A long term, sustainable plan
must trump the shortsighted, business-as-usual model that has pillaged
European waters up to the point.
The reformed CFP would do just that. Damanaki reported that
if the legislation is officially passed, it would increase fish stocks
by 15 million tons. She added that incomes would rise by 25 percent and
one-third more jobs would be created.
With access to rich, productive waters that produce a substantial amount
of the world's fish, Europe long ago positioned itself as a global
fishing leader. Now, with the historic steps set forth by the European
Parliament, they are establishing themselves as a leader in fisheries
management as well. If the EU can harness the power and skill of its
fishing fleet while enforcing legislation that maximizes their potential
to be productive and sustainable, then their fisheries will soon be
healthy and capable of supporting a robust economy. It is possible to have both.
The next step is for the Parliament and the Council of Fisheries
Ministers to negotiate a compromise by June 2013. The largest hurdles
may have been cleared, but the work continues.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andrew-sharpless/european-union-fishing-policy_b_2661401.html
http://infognomonpolitics.blogspot.gr/2013/02/blog-post_6176.html
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