Ireland's fishing industry is facing an alarming crisis as global seafood advocates warn of severe overfishing of mackerel. The North Atlantic Pelagic Advocacy Group (NAPA) reported that over one million tonnes of mackerel have been caught above scientific limits in the past five years.
Aodh O’Donnell, Chief Executive of the Irish Fish Producers Organisation (IFPO), welcomed the warning, stating, “The global marketplace for seafood is now sounding the alarm.” He highlighted that countries like Norway, Iceland, and Russia are inflating their catch quotas, jeopardising the future of mackerel.
NAPA’s findings point to a significant imbalance in fish stocks management. O’Donnell noted, “In one week alone in 2023, Norwegian vessels caught over 40,000 tonnes of mackerel.” This amount exceeds Ireland’s annual quota for 2025 and is nearly four times the permitted catch for 2026.
Despite repeated warnings about overfishing, unsustainable catches continue. The latest International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) advice suggests a 70% reduction in mackerel quotas for 2026. O’Donnell stated, “This isn’t a downturn — it’s collapse” for Ireland’s pelagic fleet.
The European Commission has acknowledged the critical condition of mackerel stocks but has been criticised by the IFPO for its lack of decisive action. “Non-EU states won’t change voluntarily,” O'Donnell warned, calling for stronger measures, including trade sanctions.
Ireland faces significant challenges, holding 12% of EU waters but receiving just 6% of fishing quotas. “That’s not partnership — it’s punishment,” emphasised O'Donnell.
The IFPO is pressing for an enforceable quota-sharing regime, sanctions against non-EU states, and the full application of Ireland’s Hague Preferences.
O'Donnell concluded, “If the EU fails to act decisively now, we risk losing an entire industry within a year.”

















































