European Parli­ament votes on lega­lising pillaging of Baltic Sea


27 June 2016

EU plan legalises overfishing

MEP Anja Hazekamp calls on her colleagues in the European Parliament to vote against the EU multiannual plan for managing the Baltic Sea. The plan was initially intended to put an end to the overfishing of Baltic Sea cod, sprat and herring stocks. However, according to the Party for the Animals, the Baltic Sea Plan has been mitigated to such an extent that ending overfishing is no longer an option. “This plan does not protect fish; it legalises overfishing,” warns Hazekamp.

Oostzee

Among other things, the Party for the Animals criticises the stretching of the boundaries of the so-called Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY): the largest yield that can be taken from a species’ stock. From 2020, fishing beyond the MSY limit will not be allowed under the existing European agreements. However, the Baltic Sea Plan introduces exemptions that allow fishermen to cross the MSY limit.

Allowing overfishing in the Baltic Sea will ultimately lead to overfishing in other waters. Fishermen who are now granted derogations for legally overfishing in the Baltic Sea, will soon demand the same exemptions for the North Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. This Baltic Sea Plan creates a precedent which opens the door to the possibility of a continued structural pillaging of all European waters. If this is all Europe is willing to do, overfishing will not stop until all waters are truly and entirely empty,” according to Anja Hazekamp.