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Belgian Fisheries Minister Kris Peeters, who led the ministerial negotiating sessions which spilled over three days, acknowledged some nations were under intense pressure to return from Brussels with more lenient catch quotas than scientists and the EU executive Commission sought. "If there is a proposal of cutting quotas by 40 percent, it is not at all easy to go home with a message like that," he said. Ministers also decided to take some action against discards, the practice of throwing good fish overboard because a catch quota has already been met, a reform that fishermen and several coastal nations have been calling for. "They have responded to our calls to find a better way to end the dreadful waste of discards, but much more can still be done," Britain's Benyon said. Environmental groups like Greenpeace call for the creation of "marine reserves" where stocks could be protected from fishing and allowed to replenish.
[Associated
Press;
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