Anglers and bait-diggers could also be affected by the issues discussed below.
e.g. 'Hand Gathering' also includes bait-digging and crab collecting etc which could be banned in 'red' areas.
A number of IFCAs are already consulting local angling and bait-digging interests prior to creating byelaws.
Anglers need to be aware of what's happening with their local IFCA and get involved with the consultations as it will be too late to change much once the byelaws have been framed.
Leon
Industry wary of EU Marine Site issues
Created on Tuesday, 28 May 2013 15:14 | |
THE NFFO is warning that the UK's fishing industry must be given sufficient time to engage and present evidence in forthcoming consultations on European Marine Sites.
IFCAs and the MMO are commencing consultations with respect to conservation features deemed highly vulnerable to certain types of fishing activity for coastal waters sites (<12nm of the coast). The approach is being pursued by the management authorities in cases where assessments have not previously been completed and management applied following site designation.
This is in line with a revised process for English waters initiated by Defra last September which followed the threat of legal challenge from the NGOs ClientEarth and the Marine Conservation Society. The intention is to introduce management measures for features deemed highly vulnerable, so called "red" risk features, by the end of 2013. For those deemed as "amber", more detailed assessments are planned with any associated management introduced by the end of 2016. Details of the revised approach can be found on the Marine Management Organisation's website at:
http://www.marinemanagement.org.uk/protecting/conservation/ems_fisheries.htm
Dale Rodmell, Assistant Chief Executive of the NFFO, said: "The process must allow for evidence to be brought forward in order to corroborate the locations of features so that management boundaries do not unnecessarily impinge on fishing areas.
"It is vital that management makes practical distinction between areas with the types of ecology that would be vulnerable to any new fishing incursions from those areas that have been fished extensively and have ecology that continues to exist in the presence of that activity. In such cases, fisheries that may have existed for decades or more must be recognised and special care taken to avoid unnecessary impacts to livelihoods.
"NGOs who claim to be supporters of the livelihoods of inshore fishermen or wish to understand the local issues at a specific site ought to be able to recognise the reasonableness and common sense of such an approach and refrain from any abstract legal response to European Directives that are widely regarded as containing significant flaws."
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