The National Inshore Fishermen’s Association (NIFA) has warned that its members will be forced to tie up to piers “long term” due to a combination of factors.
“It would have been difficult to envisage the dire situation facing inshore fishermen currently could worsen but it did so, culminating in the almost complete loss of yet another fishery so important to our economic viability,” NIFA said in a statement.
It was referring to cuts in pollack, with Area vi down 26 per cent and Area vii down by 87 per cent as a result of the EU fisheries council talks in Brussels.
“Along with a decrease in other whitefish species, the outcome will be of boats tied to piers long term,”NIFA has said in a statement.
“Although an increase in the national mackerel quota will be welcomed by the 50 large vessels in the Irish fleet, the 1,500 inshore vessels gain absolutely nothing,” the association said.
It attributes this to an “unfair, discriminatory national policy under which no more than a paltry 400 tonne [of mackerel] is ever allocated to the numerically superior, family-owned inshore sector of the fleet”.
NIFA said that shellfish market prices have been on a “fast paced downward spiral for months”, resulting in the complete collapse of the Brown crab market in Co Donegal and elsewhere.
It noted that the spurdog fishery is “stagnant”, because of the maximum legal size permitted for landing does nto meet market requirements.
“All of this on the back of several years of hardship due to the Covid pandemic, Brexit, Ukraine war and unprecedented rise in the cost of living has pushed the inshore sector to breaking point,”NIFA said.
It has called for the Minister for the Marine Charlie McConalogue and his department officials to “inject some morality” into the equation.
It has called for immediate financial aid for the sector, and for fairer access to national pelagic quotas “before a way of life is lost to rural coastal communities”.
In November, a delegation from NIFA delivered a letter to Mr McConalogue’s constituency office, outlining the need for an aid package.
“While some processors continue to purchase product, the levels at which they are buying is greatly reduced,”the letter said.
“This means vessels are on minimal daily limits on the days they are actually allowed to fish, leaving some buyers even encouraging vessels to bring their gear ashore,”it said.
“In some cases, processors have stopped completely while others have set dates for when they are closing. This coupled with the fact that many processors are delaying opening at the start of the season and are closing during the height of the season,”it said.
“This means many operators will not have built up the required capacity to maintain themselves throughout the winter months, which leaves an uncertainty to the once lucrative Christmas season when fishermen would normally receive the highest prices of the year,”it said.