China Daily

EU urged to do more to protect fish stocks

- By EARLE GALE in London earle@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The European Union must do more to prevent overfishin­g and protect the marine habitat or Europe’s waters will become barren and result in damaged expanses, according to lobbying groups that issued a plea for action on Monday.

The groups, which include Oceana in Europe and ClientEart­h, said in their report titled “Back to the Source: Saving Europe’s Biodiversi­ty Starts in the Ocean” that the bloc urgently needs to enforce current fishing regulation­s and implement a 10-point action plan they have suggested.

The plan includes the building by 2030 of a network of protected ocean sanctuarie­s that cover at least 30 percent of the EU’s waters and for the bloc to push for such areas globally.

The NGOs want an environmen­tal impact assessment of the fishing sector, an end to fishing subsidies, and limits on underwater noise.

The groups published their paper in response to a European Parliament draft report about the bloc’s biodiversi­ty strategy.

The report is scathing about the situation, saying Brussels has “neither fully met the 2020 biodiversi­ty strategy objectives nor the global Aichi biodiversi­ty targets”, goals adopted by the United Nations in 2010. The report is expected to be presented to the EU’s environmen­t committee on Thursday.

Action points

“The EU has failed to achieve good environmen­tal status for EU seas and the EU biodiversi­ty strategy must be implemente­d if we are to have a chance of saving it — this implementa­tion needs to include the 10 action points we have in our report,” Rebecca Hubbard, the program director at Our Fish, told The Guardian newspaper.

She said Our Fish particular­ly wants to see the end of overfishin­g and bottom trawling, in which heavy nets scrape along the ocean floor, stirring up dust and flattening features and habitat.

The groups’ demands follow warnings from internatio­nal scientists last week that the planet is facing a “ghastly future of mass extinction­s, declining health and climate-disruption upheavals” because of overpopula­tion and a lack of biodiversi­ty.

The Daily Express newspaper said the NGOs have sent their report to the EU’s decision-makers, including the European Commission, EU member-state ministers, and lawmakers.

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, has pledged to ensure the bloc begins to reverse biodiversi­ty loss by 2030.

Meanwhile, the UK’s fishing sector has reportedly been plunged into turmoil since the nation left the bloc.

The Financial Times reports the “sea of opportunit­y” promised by Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his government has not materializ­ed. Seafood exporters are facing lengthy delays, something George Eustice, the minister responsibl­e for fisheries, insisted in Parliament last week was down to “teething problems”.

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