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Fishermen change tack on conservation

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Published Date: 30 October 2007
THEY are the last of Scotland's true hunter-gatherers, the men who make a precarious living in the most dangerous job in Britain: harvesting the often rich bounty of the North Sea and the waters off the west coast.
They have been pilloried as robbers of the deep sea, men who plundered a fragile resource without a thought for the consequences, and vilified as an industry motivated by greed.

But, after a decade of unprecedented turmoil, which has seen the once mighty white fish fleet cut by two-thirds and a succession of draconian catching cuts, to save threatened cod stocks, Scotland's fishermen are trying on a new mantle as guardians of the resource on which their livelihoods depend.

They may not be conservationists. But they are, they insist, realists when it comes to the future of the stocks of fish, from cod to haddock to monkfish and langoustine, which inhabit the seas around Scotland's rugged coastline - waters still regarded as some of the best fishing grounds worldwide.

It has, however, required the white fish and pelagic fleets to be brought to the edge of oblivion and some of the stocks they plundered to be fished beyond sustainable levels for Scotland's fishermen to change tack and, for the first time in their history, set out on a course that should guarantee a future for both fish and fishermen in the long term.

The days of the clandestine landings of "black" fish - illegal and unreported catches of over-quota fish, which bypassed the legitimate quayside auction system - are long gone.

At one time, as much fish was being sold illegally as was being legitimately landed. But a new system of designated landing ports and registration scheme for buyers and sellers virtually wiped out the trade at a stroke on introduction in 2005.

The result, despite dwindling quotas, has been record prices at fish markets up and down the country. And those fishermen who survived the vessel scrapping schemes in 2001 and 2003 are now enjoying financial benefits that have flowed from an industry finally based on a legal foundation.

In just four years since the last decommissioning scheme, there has been a remarkable turnaround. New boats are being built, with ageing vessels replaced by modern trawlers, and for the first time in years young Scots are queuing up to train as deckhands. Industry leaders admit that it was nearing the brink of economic disaster that forced fishermen into a fundamental shift in the way they made their living.

Bertie Armstrong, the chief executive of the Scottish Fishermen's Federation, said:

"You have to remember that 20 years ago we were in what was known as the 'gadoid outburst' when, because of near-perfect conditions for fish recruitment, we had extraordinarily excellent stock levels and this was responded to by the governments of Europe, of course, by an expansion of fisheries and an expansion of the industry.

"And, as a general rule then, the way of making more money was volume: the more fish you caught, the more you got.

"There was a lot of fish in the sea and how you upped your income was just to catch more black. The accusations of over-fishing then was a fair one."

He continued: "But in the early part of this millennium there was general recognition that something had to be done to match capacity with catching opportunity and Scotland grabbed the thistle with two decommissioning rounds."

The Scottish fleet has also been at the forefront of implementing a series of measures to allow more juvenile fish to escape from their nets.

Mr Armstrong said: "We as an industry chose ourselves to impose targeted conservation measures ...

and we have seen the results. Fishermen have been saying for some time that the cod are coming back, particularly in the north, and we are delighted to see that is now reflected in the science."

Mike Park, a veteran North Sea skipper and chairman of the Scottish White Fish Producers' Association, said:

"What we had before was a situation where we took what we could, rather than take what we should as an industry.

"Throughout the 90s and into the new millennium, although guys were making money, they were having to do it illegally and that created its own instability.

"But I think that now, when most fishermen have an investment of more than £1 million in their boats, people have realised there is no room for short-term profiteering."

FISHING BY NUMBERS


2,224
The total number of Scottish fishing vessels of all types from small creel boats to huge herring and mackerel trawlers now in the fishing fleet.

2,870
The total number of fishing vessels in the Scottish fleet in 1996.

165
The number of vessels axed from the Scottish fleet as a result of two decommissioning schemes, one in 2001 and the second in 2003.

4,109
The number of fishermen regularly employed on Scottish boats. Fraserburgh has the largest number (614) with Peterhead second (412).

8,084
The total number employed in Scotland's catching sector in 1996.

80,000
The number of voyages made by Scottish boats throughout 2006 - a 17 per cent increase on the previous year's total.

£370 million
The total value of landings by Scottish boats.

£390 million
The total value of landings into Scottish ports by vessels of all nationalities.

290,000 tonnes
The total weight of landings of fish of all species by British-registered vessels into Scottish ports.

17
The number of fishermen who died in British waters in 2006.

The full article contains 929 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

A Better Way,

30/10/2007 07:52:11

Whats wrong Hootsman, havent you got any statistics on the amount of Foreign Fishing Vessels Raping OUR SEAS. You Know The Ones You Stood By And Watched Getting Shafted By Thatcher.

Hypocrits.

Remember for every Action there will be a Reaction. Looking forward to the future Unionist Trolls

2

paulr,

30/10/2007 08:30:47

The majority of the scottish fishing fleet is owned by the spanish, the trawlermen sold their license and boats to the spaninsh and mad a nice profit, take the money and run. They have no one to blame but themselves.
How is this going to stop netfulls of fish being covered in dye and tipped DEAD back into the water because a trawler has hauled in too much?

3

Dr. James Wilkie,

30/10/2007 08:33:42

These figures actually conceal the devastating damage that has been caused to the Scottish fishing industry by the EU Common Fisheries Policy. For example, they include hundreds of boats of all types down to one-man lobster boats that previously were never included in the statistics because the figures were unobtainable.

What counts is the size of the offshore fleet then and now, and there is no doubt that it has been reduced by two thirds, primarily to let in foreign vessels that simply should not have been allowed in so long as there did not exist fish stocks that were surplus to local requirements.

The EU, in its new draft constitutional treaty, seizes to itself one hundred per cent regulation of everything that swims in the Baltic, North Sea, Eastern Atlantic, Mediterranean, Aegean, Adriatic and Black Sea from the desk of the Fisheries Commissioner in Brussels.

Even if this were workable, which it is not, it would still be layman's lunacy. That system was set up to permit the original six members of the EEC to have free access to each other's waters - illegally, because the EEC Treaty gave them no authority to do any such thing. At that time there was no talk of a fisheries "policy" as such.

The whole setup has now been overtaken by developments and should be scrapped, with fisheries being returned to national control within groups of contiguous cooperating states.

4

David MacVicar,

web 30/10/2007 09:40:25

3. Dr. James Wilkie.

Excellent Post and I wholeheartedly agree.

#2 convienently forgets that the fishermen did not come up with with the lunatic quota rules in the first place.
I can remember when due to weather and other circumstances many boats tried to land their catches at Campbeltown harbour one evening in the early nineties. Due to the quota system in place 10,000 boxes of fish were dumped!! Nothing for hospitals, elderly etc. Sheer lunacy and waste.

Also, I support farmers in Scotland in general but why do Farmers get subsidies and set aside moneys when fishermen get nothing. Fishing is a life endagering, life shortening horrible job where it is very difficult to even get life insurance and they have been very poorly treated.
Fishing is and should remain a key and valuable Scottish industry and should be protected at all costs and this includes protecting our fishermen.

5

Danielrober2,

In London for work 30/10/2007 10:04:34

#3 and 4

I agree with both of you. Even though i am generally pro-european the policies towards the sea's have seen no one happy and are slowly killing them. Its a disaster. We should pull out of the appropiate agreements, before the environmental damage become impossible to reverse.

Local fishing industries, also use less fuel and hence have a lower cabon footprint.

6

Badgerczars,

near the dark side 30/10/2007 12:37:51

still cant see where the guardian bit kicks in.... how can you be a guardian when you reap, yet do not sow? When a stock runs low, another species is 'popularised' and then pillaged, despite the knowledge that they may be extremely slow growing.

7

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 30/10/2007 13:07:02

The best fishing grounds in the world are in Canada.

Anybody ever had arctic char or our wild Pacific salmon - DELICIOUS?

8

Last fish in the Clyde,

Clyde 30/10/2007 13:45:01

Bertie has to put his spin on whats going on in the sea. Thats his job!
If its all been sorted why are there no white fish left in the CLYDE, why do all the trawlers catch nothing but prawns(nethrops)
because the whole seabed has been dredged & trawled into lifeless mud.
Our mobile fishing fleet along with other european nations still needs to be cut by 50% before there is even a chance that our seas & fishing industry will become sustaianable.

9

Iain fae Elgin,

London 30/10/2007 14:06:13

The sound of a closing door is heard round an empty stable...

10

loose cannon,

Bellshill.N.Lanarkshire 30/10/2007 15:43:59

Fishy business.
Just thought I'd mention recalling one of the first actions of Nu Labour's Green Man of Buchanan Street,Glasgow, Donald Dewar, the 'Father of the Nation', was to present lumps and lumps of Scottish fishing waters to England.
Sounds fishy to me.

11

bythesea,

30/10/2007 22:53:45

And so years of lies, illegal activities, overfishing, bad practices, destroying the seabed and wiping out native species are all to be written off without a single "we are sorry".

#7 and #10 - too true

But of course as Bertie would point out - the nephrops in the clyde are in rude health, aye maybe, but the fish ????

But after them - what next - they're about as far down the foodchain as you can go without starting to eat lava bread.

Anyone think the commercial fishermen will now actively support conservation initiatives to regenerate inshore species and environments ?

www.ssacn.org

12

Roddy McColl,

Aberdeen 31/10/2007 16:19:18

Dr Wilkie is absolutely correct.
In 1973 the UK joined the EEC.
The Heath Government sacrificed the fishing industry to obtain access to the EEC. That was denied at the time, but we now know, with the release of official documents from the negotiations, that it was the truth. Many in Scotland looked with envy at Norway which rejected EEC membership because its people would not accept the terms of the then developing Common Fisheries Policy which has resulted in a gradual and stealthy process being implemented of destroying the British fleet under the guise of equal access to a common resource
All of this is designed to have a single EU fleet operating in EU waters under the control of the EU The CFP has been a social and environmental disaster. We are in an economic war and we are losing it.
Decommissiong was forced on the industry
Unless and until it is understood what is driving the crisis the industry faces year on year and adopts the only strategy for the rescue of those remaining namely, support for the National Control campaign then regrettably the Industry will continue to believe false promises that they have a viable long term future under the EU fisheries management regime.


 

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