Fish Focus

NFFO CALLS FOR A RETHINK

NFFO Calls for a Rethink on Catch Reporting for under-10 metre vessels – The NFFO backs the need for improved catch reporting but says the Government’s proposed approach has not been well-thought through.

Consultation on the Introduction of Catch Recording for licenced fishing vessels in boats under 10 metres in length.

Response by the National Federation of Fishermen’s Organisations

New Requirements

Defra, Welsh Government and the Marine Management Organisation are consulting on a new requirement for mandatory catch reporting for the under-10 metre commercial sea fishing fleet in England and Wales.

If enacted, the new requirement would oblige all under-10m vessels to provide catch information on species subject to quotas, catch limits or effort restrictions, via a mobile device (a smart phone or tablet), prior to the fish leaving the vessel. Vessels which only catch non-quota species would be required to record their catches via a smart phone or lap-top within 24 hours.

In addition, for all catches, (quota and non-quota), a declaration would be required within 48 hours providing accurate weights of all species landed.

Purpose and Intention

We agree that the under-10m sector continues to be disadvantaged by patchy and incomplete collection of catch data. Stocks such as skates and rays, which are important for many small-scale vessels, when categorised as data-limited or data-poor, have been subject to a fundamentalist interpretation of the precautionary approach, triggering 20% annual reductions in TACs over successive years. The consequence has been a severe reduction in fishing opportunities and loss of earnings for the fleets concerned. The EU landings obligation has increased the risks associated with data gaps exponentially. The skates and ray fishery illustrates the type of circumstances where improved catch data could be used to channel policy and management decisions into a more constructive direction for the small scale fleets.

Accurate catch data is likely to become more important in the future. In addition to choke risks, the design of light touch management measures for genuine low impact vessels is likely to require better catch data from the small-scale fleets than has been the case to date. Understanding the individual vessel and aggregate fleet exploitation rates are central to the design and application of management measures appropriate to the stocks and fleets concerned.

We also agree that modern technology (smart phones, tablets and lap-tops) can play an important role in collecting and transmitting data in ways that are more efficient than paper log-books. There are advantages associated with technology that can minimise reporting requirements by eliminating duplication. Systems can be updated quite simply through software updates.

Caveats and Concerns

Having made these points, we consider that the consultation reflects a regulatory approach that:

A good idea can be spoiled by poor implementation and this consultation carries the hallmarks of a recipe for, if not wholesale failure, then sub-optimal outcomes.

Our advice is to avoid the arbitrary timetable proposed and move away from a blanket approach. Instead, begin a national conversation with the different small scale fisheries in the ports and creeks about the pros and cons of improved data and the means available to secure it. This will certainly involve effort and delay but our considered view is that in the long run it will deliver better outcomes.

The list below provides a sample of the concerns raised by our members in response to the consultation. At the very least, they give a flavour of the gulf between the consultative proposals and the real world concerns which have arisen in response from very diverse fisheries.

Members’ Specific Concerns

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