UK fishermen see Brexit bonanza, but there's a catch
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[September 19, 2017]
By Nigel Hunt and Sybille de La Hamaide
NEWLYN, England/PARIS (Reuters) - For the
fishermen of this small port on the toe of England, Britain's vote to
leave the European Union was an answer to their prayers.
After 45 years chafing under what they saw as unfair quotas in one of
the world's richest fishing grounds, the UK government would finally, in
the lexicon of Brexiteers, "take back control" of British waters.
But what Brexit gives with one hand, it can also take away. European
fishermen want Brussels to use its trump card - continued access to the
essential EU market - in negotiations on how to divvy up the seas.
It's a familiar issue for negotiators hashing out the terms of Britain's
exit due in March 2019. The talks are currently focused on separation
but will move to the future relationship, including trade ties, later
this year.
"From our point of view, if they get free access to the European market,
we should also have free access to fish in the British fishing zone,"
said Niels Wichmann, head of the Danish Fishermen's Association.
Trade access is vital to Britain because it exports the bulk of the
seafood it catches while importing the majority of what it consumes,
mostly cod, salmon, tuna, haddock and prawns.
Europe imports about 75 percent of the British catch, a cornucopia of 40
species that is too exotic for most domestic consumers, such as the
cuttlefish and megrim sole sold every morning at Newlyn's market in
Cornwall.
"Previous generations were comfortable and knowledgeable in buying,
preparing and cooking seafood, but the current generation of seafood
consumers see seafood as a scary protein and tend stick to the same top
5 favorites," said Richard Watson, analyst at UK seafood industry group
Seafish.
Cod was the most popular fish in the year to June 16, 2016, at 69,321
tonnes, out of total seafood consumption of 485,691 tonne, according to
Seafish data.
The group estimates around 90 percent of the cod supply was imported
from countries such as Iceland and Norway in 2014, a number not likely
to change substantially no matter what terms are agreed on Brexit,
especially as the oceans warm up.
"Experts in the field report that cod have simply migrated further north
to colder waters as sea temperatures have naturally warmed over the past
few decades," Watson said. "This makes it more economical in trip length
and fuel costs etc for the Nordic countries to catch."
The UK has been heavily reliant on imports of the species since losing
access to the richest fishing grounds in the north Atlantic decades ago
after the so-called Cod Wars.
Much of the salmon consumed in Britain is farmed in steel cages off the
coasts of Scotland, Norway or Iceland, while tuna are generally caught
in the Indian Ocean and imported.
GAME OVER
Britain has said it plans to allow foreign ships to fish in UK waters
after Brexit but claims the right to decide the extent of access. The EU
will be seeking to maintain something close to the status quo, industry
sources say.
Any restrictions on EU market access would likely take the form of
tariffs, which can be as high as 24 percent on seafood.
For European fishermen, losing rights to British waters would have
devastating consequences.
Sean O'Donoghue, CEO of Ireland's largest fishermen's representative
body, Killybegs Fishermen's Organisation, said it would be "game over
for us".
"We've already met (EU lead Brexit negotiator) Michel Barnier as a
European Fishing Alliance Group and we got a commitment from him that
the wider trade negotiations would not be separate from fisheries ... So
far we've got some traction on that but we are very concerned,
obviously."
Killybegs said about 60 percent of mackerel and 40 percent of Dublin Bay
prawns, which together make up about 60 percent of the value of all
Irish fish landed in Irish ports, are sourced from UK waters.
About a third of the output of France's northern departments of
Normandy, Brittany and Hauts-de-France comes from UK waters.
[to top of second column] |
Fish lie in a fish tank on the Boulogne sur Mer based trawler "La
Fregate" off the coast of northern France, August 28, 2017. Picture
taken August 28, 2017. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol
"Brexit would mean a big loss in revenue for everyone ... The places
where we can fish are already limited," said Jean-Charles Frammery,
captain of French boat La Fregate.
Revenue for French fishermen would drop by 50 percent and wages by 15
percent if the UK closed its waters, said Hubert Carré, director general
at French fishermen's group CNPMEM.
Belgian fishermen get around half their catch from UK waters.
"We could go to other parts of the North Sea but it would not be able to
fully compensate," said Sander Meyns, project coordinator at
Rederscentrale, the organization representing Belgium’s fishing
industry.
Spain gets around the problem by having a Spanish-owned but
British-flagged fleet, a legacy of the years before Spain joined the EU,
when it invested in Britain to gain access to the bloc's fishing quotas,
the Spanish Confederation of Fisheries (Cepesca) said.
The quota system is one of the biggest sources of frustration for
British fishermen, who were among the most vocal supporters of the June
2016 vote to leave the EU.
For the last 34 years, the Common Fisheries Policy quota has given 84
percent of the cod in the English Channel to France and just 9 percent
to Britain, for example, according to Britain's National Federation of
Fishermen's Organisations (NFFO).
"Given the EU fleets take about four times as much fish out of UK waters
as we take out of EU waters...the expectation is there will be a lot
more fish (for UK fisherman)," said NFFO chief executive Barrie Deas.
THE SON OF A FISH MERCHANT
Barnier, the lead negotiator for the European Union, is a former French
agriculture and fisheries minister. Representing UK interests is the
senior government minister in charge of fishing, Michael Gove, the son
of a fish merchant.
So far, neither side has stated a position and there has been no mention
of fish in the official negotiating documents. The EU says failure to
reach agreements with London will hurt the British economy more than
that of the EU.
The fishing lobby's clout may have been strengthened by the outcome of
this year's parliamentary election in Britain -- the ruling
Conservatives were able to cling to power after losing seats overall
because they gained ground in the important fishing region of north-east
Scotland.
Some experts believe it may not be the end of the world if Britain loses
unrestricted access to Europe.
British consumers are already becoming more adventurous about the
varieties of fish they eat and this could accelerate that trend, said
Craig McAngus, a politics lecturer at the University of Aberdeen.
"Clearly it could be cheaper to eat fish that has been caught in the UK
than imported from wherever else. I think the market in fish will
change," said McAngus, who is researching UK fisheries post-Brexit.
David Stevens, who skippers the "Crystal Sea" boat at Newlyn, saw scope
for sales outside the EU.
"If they (the EU) decide not to buy British fish, that opens up the rest
of the world. That is a very big market," he told Reuters while
repairing his nets.
The mood in Newlyn was positive, Stevens said. But he added some were
waiting for the results of the EU talks before making investments.
"I think fishermen would definitely be looking to invest in boats,
modernize them, and get them ready for a post-Brexit future," he said.
GRAPHIC: Brexit Fishing http://tmsnrt.rs/2xKmgaH
(Additional reporting by Clotaire Achi and Pascal Rossignol aboard a
fishing boat in the English Channel, Lucien Libert in Paris, Padraic
Halpin in Dublin, Rodrigo de Miguel Roncal in Madrid and Jacob Gronholt-Pederson
in Copenhagen; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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