Wednesday, April 13, 2011
EU adopts tougher fishing rules to protect stocks
BBC: The EU has agreed on common inspection rules to prevent overfishing and make it possible to trace fish "from net to plate", the European Commission says. The rules include a new point system to punish crews who fish illegally. If they accumulate too many points they will lose their licence.
EU nations police their own fisheries, but they have agreed on common inspection and reporting methods. The controls are part of a big reform of the EU's Common Fisheries Policy.
Fisheries Commissioner Maria Damanaki said fishing data would be cross-checked electronically across Europe and law-breakers would face equally severe sanctions, whatever their nationality. Ms Damanaki said: "We can no longer allow even a small minority of fishermen to ignore the rules."…
Axel Rouvin took this photo of a trawler off the coast of Brittany, Wikimedia Commons
EU nations police their own fisheries, but they have agreed on common inspection and reporting methods. The controls are part of a big reform of the EU's Common Fisheries Policy.
Fisheries Commissioner Maria Damanaki said fishing data would be cross-checked electronically across Europe and law-breakers would face equally severe sanctions, whatever their nationality. Ms Damanaki said: "We can no longer allow even a small minority of fishermen to ignore the rules."…
Axel Rouvin took this photo of a trawler off the coast of Brittany, Wikimedia Commons
Labels:
EU,
fishing,
governance,
law
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