Maintaining the EU ban on subsidies for the construction of fishing vessels

An Taisce were one of a broad range of environmental NGOs who lobbied the EU ahead of the plenary vote on the European Monetary Fisheries Fund subsidies for new fishing vessels in the Outermost Regions last week. On March 16 the joint letter (with 101 NGOs/OIGs signed up) opposing reintroduction of subsidies for new fishing vessels went live and was sent to MEPs on the PECH Committee ahead of their vote on the amendment on March 22nd.

The win last week at Committee level demonstrated the importnat role that Irish eNGOs like An Taisce play in ensuring that the EU continues to push fro sustainable fisheries and a healthy marine environment.

The Letter read …

Dear Member of the European Parliament,

On 22 March, the European Parliament Fisheries Committee will vote on its draft own-initiative report
on the “Management of the fishing fleets in the outermost regions”1. This report will subsequently be
voted on in the plenary on 28 April. We, the undersigned organisations, ask you to express your
support for the 2014 Parliament position that maintained the ban on subsidies for the construction of
new fishing vessels, which has existed in the EU since 2004. We therefore ask you to oppose attempts
to re-introduce subsidies for the construction of fishing vessels in this draft Parliament report.

The United Nations Sustainable Development Goal on the ocean and seas (SDG 14)2
calls explicitly for theelimination of subsidies that contribute to overfishing by 2020. And rightly so: it is estimated that
taxpayers spend some US$30 billion a year on fisheries subsidies around the world, 60% of which directly
encourage unsustainable, destructive and even illegal practices.3 That is why the EU successfully phased
out aid for the construction of new vessels over a decade ago and is actively advocating in the
negotiations in the World Trade Organization to prohibit fisheries subsidies that contribute to overcapacity
and overfishing.

Attempts to reintroduce subsidies for the construction of new vessels, even if small scale or located in
remote areas, undermine the objectives of the reformed Common Fisheries Policy to end overfishing,
and send the wrong political signal from the EU to leaders around the world. We therefore urge you to
honour the Common Fisheries Policy, particularly the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund Regulation,
and oppose any attempt to reintroduce subsidies for the construction of new fishing vessels.

Civil Society will be watching closely to see how the Parliament votes on this issue and in view of the
public interest in this matter we will be making this letter available to the media in the coming days.
We wish to thank you in advance for your support for sustainable fisheries and the United Nations
Sustainable Development Goals.

Yours sincerely,

Fintan Kelly,

Natural Environment Officer,
An Taisce, the National Trust for Ireland