Ministers must use Brexit powers to end ‘national scandal’ | Politics | News


Ministers must use Brexit powers to end the โ€œnational scandalโ€ of more than 1.3 million tonnes of fish being taken from the UK’s marine protected areas (MPAs), campaigners say. The catch, which is enough to fill 500 Olympic-sized swimming pools, was taken from Englandโ€™s waters between 2020 and 2024.

EU vessels caught around 800,000 tonnes, while UK vessels caught around 545,000 tonnes. Greenpeace said the UK MPAs are designated to protect marine wildlife and fragile ocean habitats – but these designations are currently โ€œnothing more than lines on a mapโ€

Chris Thorne, senior oceans campaigner at Greenpeace UK, said: โ€œJust beneath the surface of our seas, right here in the UK, lies an extraordinary world of marine life – from shoals of colourful fish to dolphins to seahorses – but itโ€™s facing a level of vandalism greater than weโ€™d ever accept on land. The government claims vast areas of UK waters are protected, but the reality is a national scandal. Since 2020, more than 1.3 million tonnes of fish have been caught inside the UKโ€™s so-called marine protected areas.”

Mr Thorne said: โ€œProtection means nothing if these hulking industrial trawlers are allowed to devastate crucially important areas. MPAs should be safe havens where our incredible marine life and ecosystems can recover and thrive. Instead they remain protected only on paper and precious ocean life is being pushed to the brink.โ€

Almost 40% of Englandโ€™s seas are designated as marine protected areas.

But the Government has failed to use its Brexit powers to end the large-scale industrial fishing that continues to devastate these areas.

Mr Thorne said: โ€œSince leaving the EU, the UK government has had full powers to properly protect our marine protected areas – a measure thatโ€™s needed not only for marine life itself but also to support local fishing communities. Yet many remain little more than lines on a map.

โ€œBanning bottom trawling in some sites would be a step forward, but other destructive fishing methods would still be allowed and much of the MPA network would remain vulnerable.

โ€œIf the government wants to show real leadership on ocean protection, it must stop all industrial fishing in UK MPAs and work with other states to properly protect 30% of the wider Atlantic Ocean by 2030, including the Sargasso Sea. This is the only way to ensure our oceans can recover and sustain future generations.โ€

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