Fish Farmer

Scottish Government calls for £62m in fisheries support

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SCOTLAND should receive at least £62 million annually to replace the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF) from next year, according to Fergus Ewing, Cabinet Secretary for Rural Economy and Tourism in the Scottish Government.

Ewing raised the issue at an EU Exit Operations meeting last week and has now written to Secretary of State for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs, George Eustice, seeking clarity on how UK Government funding for this sector will operate from next January, when the UK’s withdrawal agreement with the European Union comes to an end.

In the letter, Ewing points out that Scotland generates 14% of EU aquacultur­e production and 9% of EU sea fisheries landings, and is responsibl­e for managing 10.9% of the European sea area. He adds that, in addition to Brexit, Scotland’s seafood sector has been hard hit by the Covid-19 pandemic, with the loss of export and food service markets.

The letter goes on: “The loss of EU funding comes at a time when the biggest risk to Scotland’s seafood industry is the UK Government’s Brexit proposals.The harm Brexit will impose on the people and economy of Scotland must be minimised as far as possible. The alternativ­e is to see our seafood industries facing potentiall­y crippling delays and additional costs, which could prove devastatin­g for jobs and exports and have wider repercussi­ons for the marine sectors and the fragile communitie­s which rely on these sectors.”

The EMFF is the fund for the EU’s maritime and fisheries policies for 2014-2020 and covers, among other things, help for local fishing industries to transition to sustainabl­e models, help for coastal communitie­s to develop their economies and aid for sustainabl­e aquacultur­e projects.The fund is used to co-finance projects, alongside national funding.

 ??  ?? Above: George Eustice
Above: George Eustice

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