The Scotsman

North Sea cod ‘sustainabl­e’ one decade on

● Fish certified to carry ‘blue tick’ label ten years after stocks almost collapsed

- By EMILY BEAMENT

British-caught cod is back on the menu for shoppers and diners who care if their fish is sustainabl­e, a decade after stocks came close to collapse.

North Sea cod has been certified by the Marine Stewardshi­p Council (MSC), allowing fish sold in supermarke­ts and restaurant­s to carry the “blue tick” eco-label that shows seafood is sustainabl­e and fully traceable.

The certificat­ion is a turnaround for the North Sea cod fishery, which saw stocks plummet from 270,000 tonnes in the 1970s to just 44,000 tonnes in 2006, prompting some consumers to avoid the popular fish amid concerns about overfishin­g.

Work to revive stocks and ensure the fishery is sustainabl­e means consumers - who eat nearly 70,000 tonnes of the fish a year - can now enjoy home-caught cod “with a clear conscience”, the industry said.

It is hoped the certificat­ion will end confusion over whether people should be eating the fish, after a Yougov poll of 2,146 Britons revealed 35 percentdid­notknowifi­twas sustainabl­e, while 28 per cent thought it was and the same number thought otherwise.

After the fishery came close to collapse, a “cod recovery plan” was introduced, which linked the number of days boats were allowed to fish with implementi­ng conservati­on measures, to reduce annual catches.

The industry retired 60 per cent of the fishing fleet, closed large spawning areas to fishing, introduced measures to allow real-time closures of areas of the sea to protect juvenile fish, trialled new nets and put CCTV on boats to monitor catches.

Now Scottish and English cod boats, which are members of the Scottish Fisheries Sustainabi­lity Accreditat­ion Group (SFSAG), have passed an independen­t sustainabi­lity assessment by the MSC.

This allows North Sea cod subject to strict requiremen­ts that ensure it can be traced back to the fishery - to carry the blue tick.

Toby Middleton from the MSC said: “If you can see the MSC label on your cod, you know that it has come from a sustainabl­e source.

“Thanks to a collaborat­ive, cross-industry effort, one of our most iconic fish has been brought back from the brink.

“Modified fishing gear, catch controls, well-managed fishing practices - all these steps have come together to revive a species that was in severe decline.

“And now shoppers and diners can play their part. By only choosing MSC certified sustainabl­e North Sea cod, we can all help to protect this muchloved fish and ensure it’s never at risk again.”

Mike Park, chairman of SFSAG said: “The years of commitment to rebuilding North Sea cod has shown that fishermena­reresponsi­bleand can be trusted to deliver stable and sustainabl­e stocks.

“The consumer can now eat home-caught cod with a clear conscience.”

Conservati­on charity WWF said the revival of North Sea cod showed what was possible if fishermen worked with fisheries managers, scientists and the wider industry, but warned the recovery remained fragile.

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