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Commercial Fishing

GOOD LANDINGS AT PETERHEAD BUT QUOTA ISSUES LOOM FOR NEXT YEAR

good landings at peterhead

Good landings at Peterhead but quota issues loom for next year.

Our picture shows the Golden Gain V coming into land at Peterhead last Thursday, where there was a healthy market of over 5,000 boxes.

Small haddock formed the bulk of the landings, but there was a good mix of other species, with almost 800 boxes of cod, 1,000 boxes of whiting and 350 boxes of saithe.

The Scottish whitefish fleet has had a difficult year, with small cod and saithe quotas and a lack of access to Norwegian and Faroese waters. The situation has been further compounded by a shortage of labour in the processing sector.

Only recently, Shetland fishermen were warning Scottish and UK government ministers to think twice about cutting cod quotas next year after official figures showed there were 285 million of the fish in the North Sea.

The International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) is recommending a reduction in the total allowable catch (TAC) for North Sea cod of 10.3%, even though it also admits that doubling quotas for the species would mean an increase of 24% in the size of the stock by 2023.

Moreover, analysis of ICES’ own figures shows that North Sea cod is abundant, with the population up from 180 million in 2018.

“There are many more North Sea cod than there are rats and mice in the UK, and almost four times more than the most common land mammal, the field vole,” said Shetland Fishermen’s Association executive officer Simon Collins.

“And yet green NGOs constantly go around describing cod as ‘threatened’ or ‘endangered’ or at risk of ‘extinction’. They should be ashamed of themselves for peddling such nonsense.
“Our governments need to ask themselves whether they are willing to create insoluble problems for our fishing fleet just because an ICES computer says so. It has often been wrong in the past, and in terms of cod it is catastrophically wrong now.”

The SFA along with the Scottish White Fish Producers’ Association (SWFPA) have asked both the Scottish and UK governments to create an independent panel to assess the ICES numbers and put them into proper perspective.

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