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    Home » MEPs demand ban on pulse fishing

    MEPs demand ban on pulse fishing

    npsnps17 January 2018
    — Filed under: EU News European Parliament Fisheries Headline1
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    MEPs demand ban on pulse fishing

    Fishing boat

    (STRASBOURG) – Members of the European Parliament voting Tuesday on new EU rules on how, where and when fish can be caught, demanded in an amendment a ban on the use of pulsed electric current for fishing.

    The new law updates and combines more than 30 regulations. It provides for common measures on fishing gear and methods, the minimum size of fish that may be caught and stopping or restricting fishing in certain areas or during certain periods. It also allows for tailor-made measures to be adapted to the regional needs of each sea basin.

    “The current state of standards is impractical, complex and rigid,” said the Parliament’s rapporteur Rapporteur Gabriel Mato: ” so there is a need to revise the technical measures. Everyone agreed we needed simplification. We shouldn’t reinvent the rules, but rather make them clearer and more practical to implement for fishermen and others, with regionalisation and results-based programming which is helpful for the fishermen, and national and local authorities being able to take decisions in line with the broad framework.”

    The amendment, which calls for a total ban on the use of electric current for fishing (e.g. to drive fish up out of the seabed and into the net), was passed by 402 votes to 232, with 40 abstentions.

    The EU rules, designed progressively to reduce juvenile catches, would:

    • prohibit some fishing gear and methods,
    • impose general restrictions on the use of towed gear and static nets (list fish and shellfish species for which fishing is banned
    • restrict catches of marine mammals, seabirds and marine reptiles, including special provisions to protect sensitive habitats, and
    • ban practices such as “high-grading” (discarding low-priced fish even though they should legally be landed) in order to reduce discarding.

    Regional measures would cover inter alia minimum conservation reference sizes, and closed or restricted areas. Member states and the Commission would have 18 months after the entry into force of the regulation to adopt regional rules on mesh sizes.

    However, it would be possible to deviate from these regional rules, via a regional fisheries multi-annual plan or, in the absence of such a plan, via a decision by the EU Commission. Member states could submit joint recommendations to this end, and MEPs ask them to “base their recommendations on the best available scientific advice”.

    The Parliament vote now authorised Fisheries Committee MEPs to start talks with the Council on the final wording of the legislation.

    Further information, European Parliament

    Adopted text will soon be available here (16.01.2018)

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