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WWF APPLAUDS EU INITIATIVE TO END MOROCCO’S ILLEGAL DRIFTNET FLEET

Environmental Panorama
Brussels - Belgium
July of 2005

 

29/07/2005 – The EU's decision to help Morocco phase out its illegal driftnet fleet, as a part of the new Fisheries Partnership Agreements is a major step forward in the move towards more sustainable agreements and the fight against the use of driftnets in the Mediterranean Sea. This should lead to the end of driftnet fishing in the Mediterranean Sea, urges WWF, the global conservation organization.
Under the new Agreement, a total of 119 EU vessels (mostly Spanish) will be allowed to fish in Moroccan waters in exchange for EU compensation of 36 million euros per year. A part of this amount will be earmarked for measures specifically designed to fund the conversion of its illegal driftnet fleet.

“This is a major progress in the promotion of sustainable fisheries and environmental protection in the Mediterranean, and should be applied to all developing countries still using driftnets in contravention with EC and international law”, says Charlotte Mogensen, Fisheries Policy Officer at WWF European Policy Office. “It is essential that the buy-back schemes applied to driftnet gear include provisions for their physical destruction, to prevent them being sold to other fleets in neighbouring countries.”

Driftnets are an environmentally harmful fishing gear consisting of a string of vertical gillnets which drift with the current for kilometres, thus causing incidental catches of species not targeted by the fisheries activities. Every year such practices kill thousands of sharks and dolphins off the Moroccan coast and in other areas of the Mediterranean. Morocco harbours the bulk of the driftnet fleet in the Mediterranean, but driftnets are still being used by the Algerian, French, Italian and Turkish fleet, despite of their complete Mediterranean ban.

According to a study carried out in 2003 by WWF and the Moroccan association AZIR, at least 177 fishing boats were using driftnets up to 14 km long to target swordfish intended for the European market. Such activities were estimated to kill around 3,600 dolphins and 23,000 sharks per year in the Alboran Sea alone (South-West Mediterranean). The fleet based in Tangiers would additionally kill 13,000 dolphins and 77,000 sharks in the adjacent Atlantic waters and the Straits of Gibraltar area.

For several years WWF has been urging the EU to monitor and prosecute the fleets of its member states using driftnets and to help Mediterranean countries put in place plans to convert their driftnet fleets. The global conservation organization believes the EU has a responsibility on this issue because it represents the main market for swordfish caught by the illegal Moroccan driftnet fleet.

Notes to editors:

Driftnet fishing is illegal according to several international conventions. Resolutions 44/225 and 46/215 adopted in 1989 and 1991 by the General Assembly of the United Nations recommended a moratorium on all large-scale driftnet fishing by 30 June 1992. In 1992 the European Community prohibited driftnets fishing in the Mediterranean with nets longer than 2.5 km. A total ban established by the EU on driftnet fishing on large pelagic species in the Mediterranean entered into force on 1st January 2002. The same decision was adopted by ICCAT (International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas) with a binding recommendation in November 2003.In November 2004 Moroccan authorities declared having prepared a plan to gradually phase out driftnets.

The study “Driftnet fishing and biodiversity conservation: the case study of the large scale Moroccan driftnet fleet operating in the Alboran Sea (SW Mediterranean)” was released by WWF in 2003 and has been published recently on “Biological Conservation”. The study is available on request.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship (Charlotte Mogensen)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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