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Displaying items by tag: Dr Noel Cawley

Tributes have been paid to Dr Noel Cawley, a leading figure in the food and equine sector who also played a key role in several Government seafood initiatives.

Dr Cawley, who died late last month at the age of 78 after a short illness, was former chief executive of the Irish Dairy Board and chair of Teagasc and the Irish Horse Board.

However, he was appointed chair of the Government’s seafood review and implementation group in June 2006, along with former Killybegs Fishermen’s Organisation chief executive Joey Murrin and Údaras na Gaeltachta chief executive Ruan Ó Bric.

The 600 million euro “Cawley strategy” for the fishing industry published in January 2007 included a 66 million euro fleet decommissioning scheme. He had no knowledge of the fishing industry, but applied his vast experience in the food sector to draw up a roadmap he was also asked to implement.

Cawley remarked that he “met so many fine, decent people” during consultations around the coast that “you often wonder why [Government] departments can't go out more and meet and explain”.

“Whereas farmers own their land, fishermen don't. This makes the uncertainty for them all that much greater," he noted.

He also remarked at the time that when he came up with any “daft notions”, Joey Murrin would put him right.

In November 2013, the then marine minister Simon Coveney also asked him to chair a national implementation group on discards of fish. This followed the introduction of a new policy to end the wasteful practice of discarding fish at sea, as is a key part of the reformed Common Fisheries Policy.

Minister for Agriculture and the Marine Charlie McConalogue was among those who paid tribute to him after his passing on June 29th.

Read his obituary in The Sunday Independent here

Published in Fishing

William M Nixon has been writing about sailing in Ireland and internationally for many years, with his work appearing in leading sailing publications on both sides of the Atlantic. He has been a regular sailing columnist for four decades with national newspapers in Dublin, and has had several sailing books published in Ireland, the UK, and the US. An active sailor, he has owned a number of boats ranging from a Mirror dinghy to a Contessa 35 cruiser-racer, and has been directly involved in building and campaigning two offshore racers. His cruising experience ranges from Iceland to Spain as well as the Caribbean and the Mediterranean, and he has raced three times in both the Fastnet and Round Ireland Races, in addition to sailing on two round Ireland records. A member for ten years of the Council of the Irish Yachting Association (now the Irish Sailing Association), he has been writing for, and at times editing, Ireland's national sailing magazine since its earliest version more than forty years ago