A new coalition of European environmental organisations has been formed to pressure the European Commission into taking legal action against member states for failing to protect marine ecosystems.
The coalition involved Blue Marine Foundation, BUND, ClientEarth, Danmarks Naturfredningsforening, Défense des Milieux Aquatiques, Doggerland, DUH, Environmental Justice Foundation, Manche Nature, Oceana and Seas At Risk.
The groups have pledged to “strengthen the enforcement of EU nature laws through coordinated litigation and legal advocacy”.
This comes one year after environmental organisations filed landmark legal complaints against six EU member states for allowing destructive fishing inside marine protected areas (MPAs).
The action aimed to highlight how Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain have been “systematically allowing bottom trawling and other destructive fishing activities to take place inside marine Natura 2000 sites”, it says.
The MPA Legal Coalition, as it is called, says that "given the European Commission’s new political drive to reduce administrative burdens, prohibiting destructive fishing practices such as bottom trawling in EU MPAs provides a clear and straightforward rule for all EU fishers, which would greatly simplify and reduce the costs of monitoring and implementation”.
The coalition says its formation comes at “a pivotal moment for EU ocean policy”. “As the European Commission undertakes an evaluation of the Birds and Habitats Directives, the Coalition argues that the effective implementation and enforcement of these directives will be decisive for meaningful ocean protection,” it says.
“With recent victories in the Dutch Dogger Bank protected area and the Banc des Flandres site, all eyes are now on EU policymakers to take heed of these rulings,” it says. “By coordinating legal action across the EU, sharing scientific evidence and supporting strategic litigation at national and European level, the Coalition aims to strengthen accountability and accelerate the implementation of existing environmental laws,” it says.
“The Coalition will focus on ensuring that governments fulfil their obligations under EU nature legislation, including the Habitats Directive and broader biodiversity commitments,” it says. "By connecting national legal action into a single, coordinated European strategy, the Coalition is building a wave of accountability,” it says.

















































