EU agrees new 2008 fish quotas

EU countries struck a deal for 2008 catch quotas today, watering down the European fisheries chief's proposals for the preservation…

EU countries struck a deal for 2008 catch quotas today, watering down the European fisheries chief's proposals for the preservation of species whose stocks are floundering at precariously low levels.

After hours of haggling through the night, the bloc's 27 fisheries ministers accepted a series of concessions offered by the European Commission, the EU's executive arm.

Ireland's quota will be 186,000 tonnes including 35,000 tonnes of whitefish. Irish fishermen will be able to catch current levels of monkfish, prawn and haddock and there was an hake and plaice catches off the south west coast and for haddock in the Rockall area.

A joint UK-Ireland initiative in the Irish Sea aimed at improving understanding of the state of stocks and avoiding "discards" - dumping of unwanted fish - will also allow participating boats to earn extra days at sea.

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As ever cod occupied top place on the ministerial agenda and quotas will be set 18 per cent lower than 2007 in most trawling areas, apart from the North Sea where scientists had indicated a slight improvement in fish numbers.

The Commission had wanted a cut of 25 per cent in most cod quotas for 2008.

The cod quota for the North Sea was raised by 11 per cent, to the dismay of conservation groups that had attacked the idea of an increase while the species' recovery still seemed precarious.

The Commission has justified the rise by saying recovery is still possible if there are fewer cod fished as a by-catch with other species, less young cod scooped up but then thrown back into the sea, called discards, and fewer fishing days at sea.

"To ensure this recovery, effort needs to be cut. Ministers agreed a 10 per cent cut in days at sea (for North Sea cod)," EU Fisheries Commissioner Joe Borg told a news conference at the end of some 20 hours of negotiations.

"The decisions taken tonight will ensure that commercial pressure on stocks will continue to decrease," he said.

Scientists have said for years cod was so seriously overfished in European Union waters that there was a risk of extinction due to stock collapse. In October, they called for the EU to set the 2008 catch at less than half of 2006 levels.

"We have a compromise that has been voted through unanimously. It hasn't been easy," said Portuguese Fisheries Minister Jaime Silva, who chaired the quota negotiations.

Other species saw lesser quota cuts than Mr Borg had first proposed, such as for Norway lobster - which looks somewhat like a large prawn or a small lobster - in Spanish and Portuguese waters. That quota cut was changed from 15 to 5 per cent, but days at sea hunting for it will fall by 10 per cent.

For anchovy, also of prime interest for Spain and Portugal, no fishing will be allowed in the key Bay

of Biscay waters until the end of spring 2008 when scientists will make an assessment.

North Sea plaice and sole would see quota cuts of 3 and 15 per cent respectively for 2008, both accompanied by a reduction in permitted fishing days of 10 percent, said Mr Borg.

During the year, national fleets gradually fill their catch allowances and are then ordered to stop fishing for particular species in a designated area. Many EU states exceed their allowances anyway so the Commission proposes more quota cuts.