ChatterBank3 mins ago
French Fishermen Fear For Their Fishing 'rights'
Makes you weep when you think about what has happened to the British fishing fleets and ports over the last 40 years !
http:// www.tel egraph. co.uk/n ews/201 6/07/12 /brexit -could- boot-fr ench-fi shermen -out-of -britis h-water s/
(I apologise if this has already been discussed)
http://
(I apologise if this has already been discussed)
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.UK boats will be barred from EU countries waters too, so the fishing industry might lose more than it gains.
// // The UK has only 13 per cent of the EU’s total sea area, but is allocated 30pc of the total quota and our trawlers fish in Irish, German, French and Dutch waters with catches worth about £100m a year.
66% of UK seafood exports go to EU countries and that seven out of the top ten countries that Britain exports to are in the EU. //
Quotas are set based on scientific evidence. We have to keep them otherwise over fishing will occur and there will be no fish to catch.
// // The UK has only 13 per cent of the EU’s total sea area, but is allocated 30pc of the total quota and our trawlers fish in Irish, German, French and Dutch waters with catches worth about £100m a year.
66% of UK seafood exports go to EU countries and that seven out of the top ten countries that Britain exports to are in the EU. //
Quotas are set based on scientific evidence. We have to keep them otherwise over fishing will occur and there will be no fish to catch.
"French boats are currently allowed to fish up to six nautical miles from the British coast but EU laws prevent British vessels from fishing within 12 miles of the French coast."
Good Lord ! why the lack of equal access ?
"About 80 per cent of France’s fishing boats never leave French territorial waters, but the remaining 20 per cent, which are larger vessels, bring in up to two-thirds of the national catch."
We'll that should sort out worries about overfishing, but maybe we could catch a few more and sell our resource to the French ? Or perhaps we could lease out fishing quotas in our waters to the French, for a price.
Good Lord ! why the lack of equal access ?
"About 80 per cent of France’s fishing boats never leave French territorial waters, but the remaining 20 per cent, which are larger vessels, bring in up to two-thirds of the national catch."
We'll that should sort out worries about overfishing, but maybe we could catch a few more and sell our resource to the French ? Or perhaps we could lease out fishing quotas in our waters to the French, for a price.
The UK's fishing waters are some of the richest in fish stock, and variety in the world. The Spanish have fished out their own waters and have had to rely on taking our fish for 30 years. Grompit does favour the gloomy view and once again quotes a set of "facts" with no sensible verification. If our fishing waters, and future revival of the fleets we once had, are such a poor exchange for the right to fish German (yes he said German fishing waters) or French or Italian Or Greek, etc. etc. why are the Spanish and French fishermen so concerned? Perhaps they know the truth and are not afraid to spell it out. We have nothing to fear, but fear itself. Don't listen to the negative gloom mongers.
The UK Government is responsible for who can fish our quota. They say who can and can't fish here. It is they who are are resposible for fishing communities dying because they favour large industrial boats over small trawler.
Take the case of the Cornelis Vrolijk. It operates out of Hull under a British flag. The British Government (not the EU) have allocated it 23% of the total British quota, while small boats get a fraction or none of the quota. It is a Dutch owned vessel, and lands its catch in Holland. The are large British owned boats, who fish on an industrial scale and get the lions share of the rest. It is the Government who are putting small boat owners out of business, not the EU.
Interesting Greenpeace article here
http:// www.gre enpeace .org.uk /media/ press-r eleases /govern ment-an swer-le gal-cha llenge- over-&l squo;un fair&rs quo;-uk -fishin g-quota -201504 24
Take the case of the Cornelis Vrolijk. It operates out of Hull under a British flag. The British Government (not the EU) have allocated it 23% of the total British quota, while small boats get a fraction or none of the quota. It is a Dutch owned vessel, and lands its catch in Holland. The are large British owned boats, who fish on an industrial scale and get the lions share of the rest. It is the Government who are putting small boat owners out of business, not the EU.
Interesting Greenpeace article here
http://
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