Irish fishing leaders have welcomed a €32 million mackerel agreement secured at the EU Agrifish Council in Brussels.
The Seafood Ireland Alliance said the deal brings short-term stability but does not resolve long-standing quota imbalances.
Irish fleets still face the loss of more than half of their 2025 EU fishing quota following earlier cuts. Rising fuel costs are adding further pressure.
The agreement follows sustained lobbying by the Alliance and engagement with Marine Minister Timmy Dooley, alongside support from Irish MEPs.
The Alliance said Ireland benefits from the deal due to its large mackerel quota built over decades. However, structural inequality remains, with Ireland controlling 12% of EU waters but receiving less than 6% of quotas.
Progress Acknowledged
Aodh O Donnell of the Irish Fish Producers Organisation said the outcome reflects months of pressure.
“We welcome this outcome. It secures landings of mackerel worth €32 million. That matters for coastal jobs and processors.
“But Ireland still has 20,000 tonnes less of mackerel to catch in 2026. This is progress, but not a full solution.”
International Pressures
Brendan Byrne of the Irish Fish Processors and Exporters Association said the deal addresses recent instability.
“Non-EU coastal states such as Norway excluded the EU from key negotiations. They inflated quotas and undermined sustainability.
“This agreement restores a level playing field in the short term and supports Ireland’s processing sector.”
Industry and Government Alignment
Patrick Murphy of the Irish South and West Fish Producers Organisation said cooperation was central to the outcome.
“Industry and government worked closely together since December. That alignment was critical.
“The result is a more balanced quota, including a 48% reduction to protect future stocks.”
Coastal Impact
Dominic Rihan of the Killybegs Fishermen’s Organisation highlighted the regional importance.
“Mackerel underpins ports such as Killybegs, Rossaveal and Castletownbere.
“This deal secures key autumn fishing opportunities and protects jobs at sea and ashore.”
Costs Rising
John Lynch of the Irish South and East Fish Producers Organisation warned that fuel costs have doubled in recent weeks.
“Many vessels are facing real viability challenges. Targeted EU supports are now needed, particularly for the whitefish fleet.”
Next Steps
Aodh O’Donnell said the agreement stabilises the fishery but does not resolve underlying issues.
“Ireland cannot continue with less than 6% of EU quotas. A fair, long-term review of policy must follow.”

















































