Britain’s fishermen will be allowed to increase their catch
of fish next year after that flout scientific advice. The quota for cod catches
for 2015 will increase by 5% on last year, though scientific advice suggested
that it should be cut by 20%.
UK fishermen will also be allowed to catch 15% more prawns
than last year and 15% more plaice in the North Sea, while the haddock catch
has been increased by 6%.
Andrew Clayton, of the Pew Charitable Trusts, which
advocates a sustainable fisheries policy, said: “After decades of failing to
get to grips with overfishing, the new common fisheries policy was supposed to
bind ministers to setting sustainable fishing limits this year. Instead, they
have set a considerable number of quotas in excess of the level scientists
advised, failing to meet the targets they set themselves for overfishing. These
are weak decisions, jeopardising the livelihoods of fishermen and the
sustainability of stocks.”
The reforms are supposed to mean that fishing fleets must
land all their catch, rather than discarding those specimens or species that
are lower value. Discarding - the wasteful practice of throwing healthy fish
back to sea because they are of lower value or because a boat has already
reached its quota. However, there are significant gaps in the new regulations
that mean many fleets will be able to continue to discard large quantities of
fish for several years.
The new European commissioner for the environment, Karmenu
Vella, admitted that many of the decisions on quotas were contrary to scientific
advice. “We have worked with ministers to ensure that where we do not follow
science, member states take the necessary decisions to avoid a real disaster
happening later.”
SOYMB can only suggest that this will be the template for
climate change agreements as seen in the Lima accord…so-called self-monitoring
and self-regulation.
No comments:
Post a Comment