Post-Tribune

Fishing is key to Brexit trade deal as talks continue to snarl

- By Raf Casert

BRUSSELS — As Brexit talks enter their decisive final days, there’s still a big catch: the fishing industry. It is holding up the trade deal between the European Union and recently departed Britain, putting at risk hundreds of thousands of jobs and tens of billions of euros in annual production losses.

While fishing is a negligible part of the nations’ economies, it is an important point of national pride for coastal and island nations and has a massive impact on politics.

Arch- Brexiteer Nigel Farage put so much stock in the importance of fishing that at one point during his successful 2016 campaign to get Britain out of the EU he steamed up the Thames on a fishing vessel.

Sir Ivan Rogers, a former career diplomat who long was the UK’s man at EU headquarte­rs in Brussels, knows what the task is of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson before the Jan. 1 deadline.

“He has to emerge with a win on fisheries,” Rogers told a panel at the EPC think tank last week.

If Johnson cannot expel enough EU fishing boats from U.K. waters, a no-deal Brexit would surely ensue, creating chaos and costs for all and ruin for some.

U.K. vessels landed close to 1 billion pounds of fish last year; the gross domestic product of the United Kingdom last year stood at $2.9 trillion.

“It’s not about economics, it’s about politics and the symbolism,” said Barrie Deas, chief executive of Britain’s National Federation of Fishermen’s Organizati­ons.

The French, Britain’s fiercest political rival for access to U.K. waters, know about symbolism — and timing — too.

On a windswept, cold Thursday, French Prime Minister Jean Castex went to the fishing port of Boulogne-sur-Mer, from where on a bright day, across the Strait of Dover, Britain is visible.

It was a show to all negotiator­s how tough France will be in defending its 13,500 fishermen during the last days of negotiatio­ns.

“We’re 17 ( nautical) miles from Dover, so we’re really close. So it’s really imperative for us to have access to the waters,” local fishing official Olivier Lepretre told Castex. If there is no deal assuring this, he said, “that would mean certain death” for France’s northern fishing fleet.

As well as France, the Netherland­s, Belgium, Ireland and Denmark are among those directly implicated by the potential closing off of U.K. waters.

For centuries, foreign fishermen shared the plentiful waters off Britain, and it has been no different since the U.K. joined the EU in 1973. But as catches dwindled, sometimes to a fraction of their previous numbers because of ruthless overexploi­tation, the number of British fishermen dwindled from 22,000 in 1975 to 12,000 in 2018. Resentment in U.K. fishing communitie­s increased.

Rightly or wrongly, EU trawlers venturing freely in U.K. waters came to be seen as a symbol of plunder and exploitati­on. When Britain voted to leave, saving U.K. waters for U.K. fishermen became a rallying cry that was endorsed right up to the prime minister’s office.

“It’s about sovereignt­y. It’s about what Brexit is for,” Deas said.

In an ideal scenario, British fishermen would have all the waters to themselves, able to expand what so long has been a diminishin­g industry.

No one could deny Britain’s rights to its waters in theory, but it’s not that simple. The EU came into the trade negotiatio­ns demanding that its boats continue being allowed to fish. Even though Brexit left the bloc in a much weaker position, U.K. exports gave it leverage.

“If they don’t allow our boats in, they can eat all the fish they catch themselves,” said a high-level diplomat from a seafaring EU nation. Some 80% of fish landed in the U.K. is exported, and three-quarters of that goes to the EU. If the Continent closes off its markets, fish would be rotting on British quays.

 ?? EMILIO MORENATTI/AP 2017 ?? Fishing is a point of pride for European coastal and island nations. Above, a fisherman works in the Netherland­s.
EMILIO MORENATTI/AP 2017 Fishing is a point of pride for European coastal and island nations. Above, a fisherman works in the Netherland­s.

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