Minister of State for Fisheries Timmy Dooley will be questioned over the outcome of the EU quota negotiations at a Joint Committee on Fisheries and Maritime Affairs meeting in Leinster House, Dublin, this morning (Tuesday, 16 December).
The meeting at 12 noon in Committee Room 2 of Leinster House will “be seeking clear answers from Minister Dooley on how this outcome was allowed to occur,” chairman Conor McGuinness said, referring to a loss of 57,000 tonnes of quota for the Irish fleet in 2026.
The result will have “an estimated economic impact of up to €200 million a year, and more than 2,300 jobs placed in immediate danger have the potential to be fatal to our fishing sector”, he said.
He said Mr Dooley would be asked “what immediate life support will be provided to the Irish fleet and processing sector, and what alternative course the Government now intends to pursue”.
“There is a fundamental imbalance here where Ireland is expected to absorb loss after loss from the original Common Fisheries Policy, through Brexit and the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement, to a quota system that consistently leaves our fleet on the margins, while others are provided access to some of the richest fishing waters in Europe,” he said.
The Joint Committee on Fisheries and Maritime Affairs has 14 members, nine from the Dáil and five from the Seanad.
The meeting in Committee Room 2 at 12 noon can be viewed live on Oireachtas TV.

















































