Fisheries expert Dr Kevin Flannery has expressed concern at a potential duplication of effort in the decision to set up a new group to prepare for the EU Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) review.
“Much work was accomplished by the recent seafood task force, and that group worked very well together and was very well informed,” Flannery, who was a member of the task force, noted.
“It would have saved a lot of time and effort if that grouping had been kept together by Minister for Marine Charlie McConalogue,” he said.
The new CFP review group was announced on February 9th by Mr McConalogue. It is to be chaired by John Malone, former secretary-general of the Department of Agriculture.
Fisheries expert Dr Kevin Flannery
He will be assisted by a steering committee comprising Mr Micheál Ó Cinnéide, former director of the Marine Institute and Environmental Protection Agency, and Mr Donal Maguire, former Bord Iascaigh Mhara director.
The group will involve representatives of stakeholders, including producer organisations, the National Inshore Fisheries Forum, the aquaculture industry, co-ops, and the seafood processing industry. It will also include representatives of environmental NGOs.
Its remit is to examine the issues that arise for Ireland in the context of the CFP Review, to advise the minister on priorities for the negotiations, and to identify strategies most likely to influence the outcome of the review.
Flannery said that much depends on the terms of reference for the EU CFP review, and initial council meetings suggested that it would take a conservative approach.
During a visit to Ireland in late September 2021, EU Commissioner for Fisheries Virginijus Sinkevičius said he “cannot promise” any fundamental change.
“We’ll do a review, and we will be listening to stakeholders’ concerns, and we’ll look at certain changes, but I cannot promise we will be reopening the CFP,” the commissioner said.
“Fishermen have to go through a lot to comply with the rules, and I think it would be unfair to make many changes, so I take a very cautious way here, and only after a review is done and gaps are identified can we take additional action,” the commissioner added.