Amsterdam, Netherlands —
Greenpeace today applauded the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) for its drastic but responsible call for a complete overhaul of deep-sea fisheries management in the North Atlantic. ICES is recommending that no new deep-sea fisheries are allowed until they can be shown to be sustainable, and that existing deep-sea fisheries are significantly cut back (1).
"Unfortunately, the ICES recommendations confirm what we have been
saying all along: that deep-sea fisheries are in deep, deep trouble, "
said Karen Sack, Greenpeace Oceans Policy Advisor.
Deep-sea fisheries are considered particularly vulnerable to
overfishing because they are slow growing and slow to reproduce. ICES
is the oldest intergovernmental organisation coordinating and promoting
marine research in the North Atlantic, Baltic and North Sea. It
provides recommendations to 19 countries and is a meeting point for
over 1600 marine scientists.
The European Community is responsible for more than half of all high
seas bottom trawl catches worldwide, most of which occurs in the North
Atlantic. Bottom trawling is widely recognised as the most
destructive fishing method currently in use.
According to Saskia Richartz, Greenpeace EU Marine Policy Advisor, "it
is time for the European Union to take responsibility for its
actions. To start, it should support the establishment of a UN
moratorium on high seas bottom trawling so that it can put the ICES
recommendations to overhaul deep-sea fisheries management into
practice."(2)
Negotiations are currently underway at the United Nations on how to
protect sensitive deep-sea habitats from the impacts of high seas
bottom trawling. But many states, including some from the
European Union, are claiming that negotiators reached a 'gentleman's
agreement' last year to wait two years before taking action on this
issue.
According to Sack, "it's unbelievable to think that these
decision-makers may ignore urgent scientific advice because of a
behind-closed-doors agreement that they made among themselves. There
are too many examples of fisheries mismanagement already. The ICES
findings show that scientific evidence clearly supports the need for
immediate international action now to protect deep-sea life. The
question is whether the policy makers will act or wait another year
while they allow the destruction to continue."
Notes to Editor
1. The full ICES Report can be found at www.ices.dk
2. Greenpeace is a member of the Deep Sea Conservation Coalition which is calling for immediate action at the United Nations General Assembly for a moratorium on high seas bottom trawling - the most destructive fishing method currently practiced, and biggest threat to deep-sea life. For more information, go to:www.savethehighseas.org.