SCOTTISH MACKEREL FISHERMEN SLAM CATCH ADVICE FOR 2026

Scottish mackerel fishermen slam catch advice for 2026. Scotland’s pelagic fishermen have reacted angrily and with incredulity to catch advice for mackerel published by the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES).
Ian Gatt, chief executive of the Scottish Pelagic Fishermen’s Association (SPFA), said:
“The headline recommendation of a 70% reduction in Total Allowable Catch in 2026 compared with this year is presented as ‘the best available science’. It may be based on science, but its conclusion is a hammer blow to the industry because of bad assumptions and frankly guesswork.
“It seems that absurdly cautious assumptions have prevailed over hard evidence. ICES advice has been highly variable in the past few years and we understand that this year it reflects an arbitrary choice of a recruitment period into the fishery. It is unacceptable that the viability of our industry should be jeopardised by an ICES best guess decision plugged into a computer model. In short, the same science with better assumptions would lead to a much better outcome for our industry.”
Richard Williamson, the Shetland-based second skipper of the LK62 Research and chair of the SPFA, pointed out that the new advice bore no resemblance to what he and other fishermen were seeing right across the mackerel fishing grounds in the Northeast Atlantic:
“We don’t disagree that the stock is not as high as it was back in 2015-16, for example, but we believe that the stock is in better shape than it was two years ago.
“We wouldn’t disagree either that a comprehensive, long-term sharing arrangement binding all players in the international mackerel fishery, based largely on zonal attachment combined with a long-term management plan for this important stock, is long overdue.
“Fishermen are custodians of the sea. We have no interest whatsoever in demanding excessive quotas that would end up crippling our businesses and the communities that depend on them. That is why we have objected to ICES advice in the past when we felt it was too high, as we did when the ICES advice for North Sea herring was increased by 32% in 2024, for example.”
For the Shetland Fishermen’s Association, Simon Collins pointed out that the pelagic fishing fleet had itself become a major and credible contributor to hard scientific data in recent years.
He said:
“We believe in scientific guidance on catch limits when it is backed with real data and a rigorous scientific process. We utterly reject this new approach by ICES, in which reckless guesswork and fag-packet choices in analysing serious data result in recommendations that threaten a critical part of the UK’s fishing fleet and all the onshore businesses that depend on it. This is not how any scientific institution should conduct itself.”
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