Parliament fights overfishing by voting to reform subsidies
Greenpeace cautiously welcomed decision by the European Parliament to cap subsidies for the modernisation of the EU fishing fleet and to reject proposals to subsidise the construction of new boats. It warned however that a number of loopholes remain that would allow governments to continue to boost the ability of Europe’s fleet to catch fish.
The European Parliament was voting on the new European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF), which will channel public investments for fishing and aquaculture under the implementation of the recently reformed EU Common Fisheries Policy.
Commenting on the outcome of the vote, Greenpeace EU fisheries policy director Saskia Richartz said: “Europeans want to see healthy seas and an end to overfishing, not perverse subsidies that undermine these goals by keeping an oversized fleet afloat. The Parliament has put its weight behind positive initiatives such as the more research on stock recovery measures and the monitoring of fishing vessels. This can help make sustainable EU fisheries a reality, as long as governments follow the direction that Parliament set”.
Depending on the outcome of negotiations with EU governments, the new fisheries fund could increase public investments in data collection, control and enforcement, and sustainable fisheries management, and help reduce public spending on fleet modernisation and other measures that increase the environmental impact of fishing. The Council and Parliament are expected to start negotiations on a final deal in the coming month.
Source: Greenpeace EU Unit
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