Commission calls for effective international action against destructive deep sea fishing practices
On 4 and 5 October, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York will discuss what action might be taken to
prohibit destructive fishing practices on the high seas. The European Commission, on behalf of the European Union, will
propose a coherent package of international measures which can deliver real protection for sensitive deep sea ecosystems
and related vulnerable fish stocks. The actions sought include an immediate freeze on the expansion of deep sea fishing
in regulated areas with bottom gears, further efforts to complete the process of identifying and protecting all
sensitive ecosystems in areas currently covered by Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) and the immediate
prohibition by flag states of destructive fishing methods by their vessels on the sites of sensitive marine habitats in
unregulated areas, until they can be guaranteed a high level of protection through the creation of new RFMOs, or through
appropriate interim arrangements. The EU's position is set out in a Commission working document on destructive fishing
practices in the high seas which is published today.
Commissioner for Fisheries and Maritime Affairs Joe Borg commented: “Protecting the vulnerable deep sea environment is
essential for the future of fisheries and other marine resources. The EU will present to the UN a set of realistic,
effective and enforceable proposals that can be implemented expeditiously. Vulnerable deep sea habitats should be
declared off limits for destructive fishing practices. Our proposals cover new ground including concrete and legally
binding flag states arrangements, where no such regulation exists so far. They will, also give RFMOs real clout in
prohibiting destructive practices in vulnerable habitats.
The European Union proposal contains a number of elements which not only set objectives but also specify the necessary
regulatory and control mechanisms to realise them. The EU calls on the UN General Assembly to:
• declare that its overall objective is that all necessary measures be taken to ensure that vulnerable marine
habitats are protected from the adverse impacts of destructive fishing practices;
• request states to declare such vulnerable marine habitats off limits to fishing with any bottom gear (including
bottom trawling, towed dredges, bottom gill nets and certain kinds of long line);
• require states to take urgent steps to collect information with a view to the identification and mapping of
vulnerable habitats, in close cooperation with the relevant scientific bodies.
In areas already covered by an RFMO, the Commission calls for an immediate freeze on any expansion of deep sea fishing
with bottom gears until an appropriate regulatory regime has been established. Such regime would rest on the closure of
all vulnerable marine habitats identified on the basis of scientific advice to bottom fishing.
In areas not yet covered by an RFMO, the Commission calls on all states to implement an interim prohibition on
destructive fishing practices by vessels flying their flag wherever there may be vulnerable marine habitats.. It also
calls for urgent action to set up RFMOs in the currently unregulated areas of the world's oceans. In the interim, all
states concerned should agree on mechanisms to collate scientific advice and to introduce measures for stock
conservation and the protection of vulnerable habitats.
The European Union continues to play a leading role in both establishing new RFMOs, and reforming and modernising those
which already exist so as to enable them to protect such ecosystems from destructive fishing practices. The EU is also
taking the lead in tabling measures through the RFMOs to establish closed areas, as seen recently in the General
Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (See IP/06/99). The European Union is committed to working together with all
its international partners to secure effective protection of the deep sea marine environment, and remains open to
considering all measures proposed by other parties in order to establish the most effective way to move forward.
The working document setting out the EU's position can be found at:
Further information on the EU's action to date to protect vulnerable deep sea ecosystems: