The Scotsman

Net gains: five families own 1/3 of fish quota

● Greenpeace findings show control of industry rests with Rich List elite

- By ILONA AMOS Environmen­t Correspond­ent

Five wealthy families control a third of all fishing rights in Scotland, according to a new investigat­ion by internatio­nal campaign group Greenpeace.

The same families, who all appear in the Sunday Times Rich List, own more than a quarter of the UK’S total catch allowance.

The findings are revealed in landmark study by Greenpeace’s Unearthed investigat­ions unit, which for the first time maps out the ownership and distributi­on of fishing quota across UK waters.

The report also shows that 13 out of the 25 biggest stakehold- ers across the UK were linked to the Blackfish scandal, one of the biggest criminal overfishin­g cases to reach British courts. The study shows that the top five power families also have investment­s in companies and fishing vessel partnershi­ps that hold further stakes in the UK quota, meaning they have influence over 37 per cent of the total rights.

It found those with the biggest allocation­s of quota can make millions of pounds leasing their rights without casting a net.

The report highlights how a company in Northern Ireland, which holds more than half the nation’s quota, recently got rid of its boat but earned £7 million in a year from its quota while waiting for a new one.

Scotland is the UK’S largest fishing nation, with twothirds of all quota. The concentrat­ion of ownership here is most acute, with the five biggest players holding 45 per cent of the Scottish quota once stakes and shares in other firms are taken into account.

Campaigner­s say the report shows a “vastly unequal and mismanaged system”, where a tiny minority of wealthy families control huge swathes of fishing rights to the detriment of local fishermen. They have branded the situation a “national disgrace”.

Will Mccallum, head of oceans at Greenpeace UK, said: “This stunning sell-off of British waters by our own government is a national disgrace and an economic, social and environmen­tal tragedy.

“Successive government­s have presided over a monumental mismanagem­ent of this precious public resource, destroying the livelihood­s of local inshore fishermen, eroding coastal communitie­s and encouragin­g unsustaina­ble fishing, while allowing a wealthy cabal of fishing barons to become the UK’S codfathers.”

But industry leaders have rejected the claims, accusing Greenpeace of “painting a completely false picture of the UK fishing industry”.

Bertie Armstrong, chief executive of the Scottish Fishermen’s Federation, insists sustainabi­lity is a key priority for today’s fishing fleet and fewer large vessels are better for the environmen­t than lots of smaller ones.

He added: “The only thing that has eroded our coastal communitie­s is a blatantly inequitabl­e EU Common Fisheries Policy, which awards other fishing nations 60 per cent of our fish stocks.

“Instead of focusing on the events of well over a decade ago to carry out a hatchet job, Greenpeace should be crediting the industry for its forward-thinking approach.”

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