Managing Commercial Fishing in English SACs, and the Implications

Jean-Luc Solandt (Marine Conservation Society), Tom Appleby (University of the West of England) and Miles Hoskin (Coastal and Marine Environment Research) have published an article in 2013 in Environmental Law and Management [www.lawtext.com] titled: “Up Frenchman’s creek: A case study on managing commercial fishing in an English Special Area of Conservation and its implications.”

The introduction to this article states: “The Habitats Directive has matured over the years since it has been implemented. One of the last industries to feel its application is the commercial sea fishing industry: the industry which according to the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution has the most direct effect on the marine ecosystem.

“This article outlines one of the earliest applications of the Directive to commercial fishing in the UK’s Fal and Helford Special Area of Conservation (SACSAC Special Areas of Conservation), where a national NGO brought pressure to bear on local and national administrators over failure to implement the Directive in a European marine site.

“It goes on to describe how different regulators took differing approaches to their roles and how the lack of enforcement capacity of one statutory nature conservation agency meant that the NGO had to threaten a complaint to the European Commission and potential infraction proceedings against the UK before the European marine site was closed to damaging fishing operations.

“It then explains how this test case has percolated into UK fisheries management around the UK, leading to the closure of damaging fisheries in Welsh marine sites, policy changes over the management of English sites and a growing debate over whether the proper application of the Directive and other European environmental legislation to marine fisheries is inevitable in the rest of the UK and the European Union.

“Commercial fishing will undoubtedly continue in UK waters but it is likely that those fishing methods which have a significant impact on the marine environment will face an increasing burden of regulation where they wish to continue to operate in marine protected areas.

To see this article in full as a pdf, click here.


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