EuroNews (English)

Brussels picks fight over UK ban on sand eel fishing

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Robert Hodgson

The European Commission has requested talks with the UK government after London decided to shut down industrial sand eel shing on environmen­tal grounds, while in Brussels marine conservati­onists have launched a campaign demanding the EU ban destructiv­e bottom trawling in its own marine protected areas.

The UK government and its devolved Scottish counterpar­t both announced the end of industrial sand eel shing at the end of January. Today (16 April) the European Commission said it was triggering the dispute settlement mechanism in the EU-UK Trade and Cooperatio­n Agreement (TCA).

Unless a satisfacto­ry agreement is reached with 30 days, or more if both parties agree to extend talks, the EU may request an arbitratio­n tribunal adjudicate on the “compatibil­ity of the UK's measures” with provisions in the agreement, which the EU executive said called for an “evidence-based, proportion­ate and non-discrimina­tory” approach to marine conservati­on.

“The UK’s permanent closure of the sand eel shery deprives EU vessels from shing opportunit­ies, but also impinges on basic commitment­s under the EU-UK Trade and Cooperatio­n Agreement,” EU commission­er for environmen­t, oceans and sheries, Virginijus Sinkevičiu­s said.

Under the post-Brexit trade agreement, the EU shing eet retains reciprocal access to UK waters. Denmark holds over 90% of the combined EU/UK quota for the diminutive sh of around 160,000 tonnes, with around a third of this allocated to areas in UK waters, mostly Scottish.

“Measures are already in place to protect this important species, including by setting catches below the scienti c advised levels and closed areas for protecting seabirds,” Sinkevičiu­s said. The EU executive had been under pressure to act since Denmark and Sweden raised the issue at an EU Council summit of agricultur­e ministers in late February.

The same day the Commission raised its objections to the UK environmen­tal protection measure, intended in particular to prevent the dwindling of population­s of seabirds that feed on sand eels, marine protection NGOs launched a campaign demanding an EU ban on the destructiv­e practice of bottom trawling in marine protected areas.

In a report published today, the Marine Conservati­on Society, Seas At Risk and Oceana analysed data on commercial shing by Denmark, Germany, Ireland, the Netherland­s, Portugal, Spain, and Sweden and concluded that bottom trawling was still taking place in 90% of o shore EU marine protected areas, despite the 2023 EU Marine Action Plan that calls for phasing the practice out by 2030.

“Our campaign is putting a stop to ‘out of sight, out of mind’ when it comes to what EU government­s are allowing in socalled protected waters,” said Tatiana Nuño, senior marine policy o cer at Seas at Risk. “While EU politician­s waste precious time with pre-election populist posturing, the biodiversi­ty and climate crises rage on unabated.”

 ?? ?? A   shing boat in Bagenkop, Denmark.
A shing boat in Bagenkop, Denmark.

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