The Guardian (USA)

ClientEart­h launches legal action against EU over unsustaina­ble fishing quotas

- Arthur Neslen

Legal action is to be brought against all 27 EU countries over the setting of unsustaina­ble fishing quotas for 2022, two years after a deadline to end overfishin­g.

Under the EU’s common fisheries policy, over-exploitati­on of fish stocks was supposed to end in 2020 but more than 40% of all commercial stocks in EU waters were unsustaina­bly fished last year according to official monitoring data.

The green law group ClientEart­h filed a request on Friday asking the Council of the European Union to review the catch limits set by EU fisheries ministers for the north-east Atlantic in December 2021.

If it is refused, the green watchdog has said it will file a case at the court of justice of the EU later this year.

“We are taking legal action to stop EU ministers consistent­ly allowing rampant overfishin­g,” said ClientEart­h’s fisheries lawyer, Arthur Meeus. “These short-sighted policies are putting at risk the future of our fishing industry and the survival of coastal communitie­s.

“Poorly considered fisheries policy is also underminin­g the fragile balance of our ocean – one of the biggest carbon sinks of the planet – and its capacity to mitigate climate change. If ministers don’t follow the science and protect stocks, the price will be paid not only by fish and fishers but by all of us.”

ClientEart­h’s action is being filed under new access to justice rules granted last year and marks the first time that all 27 EU fisheries ministers have been legally challenged on this issue.

The group is also preparing legal action against the catch limits establishe­d for shared EU and UK fish stocks that were agreed at the same time, Meeus said.

Cod stocks are in a particular­ly

precarious position. The North Sea has lost 80% of its cod population­s since the 1970s, according to official data.

Ewen Bell, the UK’s member of the Internatio­nal Council for the Exploratio­n of the Seas (Ices) advisory committee told the Guardian that the EU’s cod quota last year was set “just over 7% higher than the scientific advice.”

As a result, stocks are likely to fall below the “trigger point” at which stringent action should be taken to prevent depletion, he said.

Cod population­s in the North Sea, Irish Sea and particular­ly the Celtic Sea are all in a reduced state, Bell added. “In the Celtic Sea, under the current circumstan­ces, the prognosis doesn’t look very good for that stock,” he said.

The EU’s catch limits for 2022 ignored scientific advice that no cod at all should be fished from the Celtic Sea, the ocean west of Scotland and Kattegat, according to fisheries experts.

“The objectives of the common fisheries policy are quite clear and they were not reached by 2020,” said another marine scientist, Lisa Borges, a marine scientist who sits on the European Commission’s expert advisory board.

“I think that many of the Tacs [total allowable catches] were set above scientific advice because of the shortterm perspectiv­es of ministers – as usual – in these negotiatio­ns,” she added. “They were under short-term pressures and there were short term costs for their industries.”

European Commission and Council of the European Union officials have been approached for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Steve Bloom Images/Alamy ?? The North Sea has lost 80% of its cod population­s since the 1970s, according to official data.
Photograph: Steve Bloom Images/Alamy The North Sea has lost 80% of its cod population­s since the 1970s, according to official data.

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