Fishing vessel Albatun Tres, belonging to the firm Albacora S.A. (Photo: Greenpeace)

Five of the most destructive vessels are Spanish, Greenpeace accuses





SPAIN


Thursday, November 06, 2014, 01:40 (GMT + 9)

Spain’s five fishing vessels are among the 20 most destructive community fishing vessels in the European Union, according to a new report of the environmental organization Greenpeace.

Out of these five ships, two are from Galicia: Eirado do Costal, with home port in Cangas, and Playa de Tambo, based in Marin.

The other three vessels are from the Basque Country: Albacora Uno, Albatún Tres and Txori Argi.

With the release of its report, Monster boats, The scourge of the oceans, the NGO intends to warn on overfishing issues and protect the oceans through sustainable fishing.

Greenpeace details that other ships belong to the following countries:

  • Netherlands: 2;
  • Portugal: 2;
  • Sweden: 1;
  • UK: 2;
  • France: 1;
  • Germany: 2;
  • Denmark: 1;
  • Lithuania: 2;
  • Poland: 1;
  • Vanuatu: 1.

The NGO’s aim is that the publication of this report forces the vessels mentioned in it to withdraw from the oceans.

“European countries, particularly Spain, have a fishing capacity that is higher than that the oceans can tolerate, and the only solution is to reduce the fleet, so when the time comes to do so, we urge the governments to start with the most harmful boats as those in the list,” points out Marta Gonzalez, head of the Greenpeace’s Oceans campaign.

The publication of the list of vessels was criticized by the secretary general of the Spanish Fisheries Confederation (CEPESCA), Javier Garat, believing that the NGO launches baseless attacks to larger vessels that operate “legally”.

For the leader, it is “fake” that the Spanish tuna boats that are contributing to the depletion of resources, because they are catching species “in good health, supported by scientific data.”

On the other hand, Nina Thuellen, EU fisheries project coordinator, stated: “A relatively small number of industrial fishing barons are recklessly making huge profits from our oceans, with little respect for environmental and social considerations. They use tricks – like changing the identity and flag of their vessels or using front companies and tax havens to increase their access to fishing grounds or, blatantly circumvent rules and regulations.

For that reason, she urged Governments “must stop turning a blind eye to overfishing by taking action on monster boats and support low-impact fishers instead.”

For her part, Gonzalez stressed that “it is time the Spanish Government took firm steps to comply with the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP)” and implement concrete measures to solve the overcapacity issue.
 

By Analia Murias
editorial@fis.com
www.fis.com

 

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