 Shark Conservation Gets a Boost European Commission Pushes to Close Loopholes in Shark Finning Ban
Brussels (21/11/2011) -
The Shark Alliance welcomed the long-awaited proposal today from the
European Commission for closing the loopholes in the European Union’s
ban on shark finning, the wasteful practice of slicing off a shark’s
fins and discarding the body at sea. Read the proposal
According
to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), every
year millions of sharks are finned worldwide. The current EU regulation,
adopted in 2003, is too lenient to ensure that finning is not
continuing undetected and unpunished. The proposal, if adopted by the
European Parliament and Council of Ministers, would ensure that all
sharks taken by EU vessels or in EU waters are landed with their fins
still naturally attached to their bodies. Marine conservationists and
scientists recommended this policy as the most reliable means of
enforcing a finning ban.
“The
Commission’s proposal is a positive step toward the much-needed
protection of sharks,” said Sandrine Polti, shark policy adviser to the
Pew Environment Group and the Shark Alliance. “The responsibility now
lies with the Fisheries Ministers and members of the European Parliament
for all 27 EU Member States, who must agree to this proposal as the
only reliable way of ensuring that sharks are not finned.”
Shark
fins are the key ingredient in a traditional and expensive Asian soup.
The EU, particularly Spain, is one of the world’s largest suppliers of
shark fins to Asia.
The
Commission has proposed ending special fishing permits, still granted
by some Member States, that allow fishermen to remove shark fins at sea
and bring bodies and fins to port separately. Spain has issued the
largest number of these permits, enough to cover its entire longline
fleet. The country’s fishing industry and government are expected to
continue to lead the opposition to proposed improvements in the finning
ban.
Last
month, as part of the fifth annual “European Shark Week,” tens of
thousands of concerned citizens across Europe called on EU Fisheries
Ministers to help close loopholes in the finning ban and to fulfill the
commitments of the EU Plan of Action for sharks.
For more information, media interviews, or B roll, please contact: Sophie Hulme. Tel: +44 (0) 7973 712 869. Email: sophie@communicationsinc.co.uk.
The
Shark Alliance is a coalition of more than 100 conservation,
scientific, and recreational organisations dedicated to restoring and
conserving shark populations by improving shark conservation policies.
The Shark Alliance was initiated and is coordinated by the Pew
Environment Group, the conservation arm of The Pew Charitable Trusts, a
nongovernment organisation that is working to end overfishing in the
world's oceans. Every October, members of the Shark Alliance in Europe
conduct a week of public activities to promote shark appreciation and to
call for conservation measures. For details of this year’s European
Shark Week, please go to www.europeansharkweek.org.
Notes
The
high value of shark fins, in contrast to the typically lower value of
shark meat, creates the economic incentive for shark finning. Landing
sharks with fins attached not only effectively halts the practice of
finning, but it also offers vastly improved information about the
species caught. This information is vital for robust population
assessment and effective shark management.
Although
the current EU finning regulation prohibits the removal of shark fins
at sea, a derogation allows EU Member States to provide fishermen with
special permits to remove fins on board vessels, provided that the
fin-to-body weight ratio of the catch does not exceed 5 percent. This
ratio is higher and thereby more lenient than ratios used in other
countries. Fishermen with permits are also able to legally land shark
fins and bodies in separate ports, a practice that further hampers
enforcement. Germany and the United Kingdom recently stopped issuing
these permits. Spain and Portugal grant them for most of their shark
fishermen, and Cyprus has recently issued one.
The
European Commission’s Community Plan of Action for sharks
(COM/2009/0040) includes, among other things, a pledge to strengthen the
EU finning ban. In their 2009 endorsement of this Plan, the EU Council
of Fisheries Ministers urged the Commission to give special attention
and priority to the finning issue.
In
December 2010, the European Parliament endorsed a Resolution (Written
Declaration 0071/2010) calling on the European Commission to deliver a
proposal to prohibit the removal of shark fins on-board vessels.
Earlier
this year, the European Commission completed a three-month public
consultation on options for amending the EU finning regulation,
including a ban on at-sea fin removal. Comments reflected strong support
for the “fins naturally attached” option from conservationists,
scientists, divers, aquarists, and citizens.
The
“fins naturally attached” policy has been recommended by the
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and the United
Nations and is used in shark fisheries in Central America, Australia,
and the United States.
A study published by the IUCN Shark Specialist Group (SSG) and the European Elasmobranch Association (EEA) in December 2010, “Sharks fins in Europe: Implications for reforming the EU finning ban,”
compared the EU’s shark catching, processing, trade, and regulations
with those of the rest of the world and made recommendations for
improvement, including calling for the prohibition without exception of
removal of shark fins on board vessels.
The
Shark Alliance is a coalition of more than 100 conservation,
scientific, and recreational organisations dedicated to restoring and
conserving shark populations by improving shark conservation policies.
The Shark Alliance was initiated and is coordinated by the Pew
Environment Group, the conservation arm of The Pew Charitable Trusts, a
nongovernment organisation that is working to end overfishing in the
world's oceans.
Every
October, members of the Shark Alliance in Europe run a week of public
activities to promote shark appreciation and call for conservation
measures. For details of this year’s European Shark Week, please go to www.europeansharkweek.org.
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