EU fishermen may get “uplift” in their fishing quotas to compensate for loss of Russian market

Reuters reports, 10th October 2014: “ EU ministers will debate on 13th October 2014 whether European fishermen can extend their quota limits next year to compensate for the loss of Russian customers following Moscow’s ban on Western food imports.

The European Union’s fisheries chief said she would ask ministers to support her proposal to allow member states to carry over up to 30 percent of their 2014 fishing quotas to next year because of the ban. Under the EU’s reformed Common Fisheries Policy, member states are allowed to bank, or carry over, up to 10 percent of their annual catch limits to the following year if they do not hit their quotas.

“Since Russia has introduced an embargo on imports of European fisheries products this summer, we agreed that we need to help our fisheries sector in Europe – and quick,” Maria Damanaki said in a statement.

Russia in August imposed a one-year embargo on meat, fish, dairy, fruit and vegetables from the United States, the EU, Canada, Australia and Norway in retaliation for Western sanctions over Russia’s role in the Ukraine crisis. EU fish exports to Russia were worth about 200 million euros ($250 million) in 2013, or 5 percent of the EU’s total fish exports.

In September Damanaki said that she was looking into the possibility of increasing the amount that member states could carry over but had to check with the Commission’s scientific advisers that relaxing the bloc’s fishing limits would not endanger the sustainability of Europe’s depleted fish stocks.

The EU has committed to ending decades of over-fishing and to rebuilding its fish stocks by 2020. Its annual catch limits regularly produce heated debate and those for 2015 will be discussed by EU agriculture ministers on Monday.

Damanaki said relaxing the fishing limits would not have a detrimental effect on Europe’s fish stocks, and the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) – which advises the Commission on its fisheries policy – had said that it would have a “slightly positive effect for sustainability.”

The main countries exporting fish products to Russia in 2013 were Denmark, Latvia, Britain , Ireland, Estonia, Spain and France.

See also another relevant article on our website: Scottish fishermen allowed to “bank” 2014 Russian mackerel quota

Source: Reuters, 10th October 2014. For the full text see: http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/10/us-ukraine-crisis-eu-fish-idUSKCN0HZ1MD20141010?feedType=RSS&feedName=environmentNews

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