Report uncovers serious failure to protect EU Seas as NGOs demand for the full European Oceans Pact to address shortcomings highlighted
Report uncovers serious failure to protect EU Seas – NGOs call for full use of Marine Directive
ClientEarth, BirdLife Europe & Central Asia, Seas At Risk and Surfrider Foundation Europe call on EU leaders to urgently address the serious failure to protect EU seas that has been confirmed by a new report published by the European Commission.
The Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) is the key framework for the ecosystem-based management of all human activities at sea. It sets a series of indicators for achieving good environmental status (GES) in EU seas by 2020, requiring action to prevent and reduce pollution, and protect biodiversity.
But the evaluation report published today highlights that, despite progress in some areas, EU countries have mostly failed to protect EU seas. In particular, nutrients and chemicals still cause harm to marine life and marine biodiversity continues to decline.
NGOs are calling for the European Oceans Pact to address shortcomings highlighted today – such as lack of enforceable provisions, policy coherence and funding. The Oceans Pact must call for the strengthening of the MSFD as an overarching framework by tightening the links with the Marine Spatial Planning Directive and the Nature Restoration Regulation. It needs legally binding and measurable targets and thresholds to achieve GES, including the effective management of at least 30% of EU seas as protected areas by 2030, including 10% under strict protection.
Bellinda Bartolucci, Senior lawyer at ClientEarth said:
“EU countries pledged to protect and restore the EU’s seas by 2020, but have completely missed this legal deadline. Protecting EU seas is not just an environmental duty — it’s an economic and social necessity. Healthy marine ecosystems are essential for coastal communities and sustainable fishing practices. Without urgent action, we risk losing the very foundation of our blue economy and the natural resilience of our oceans.”
Tobias Troll, Marine Policy Director at Seas At Risk said:
“The MSFD is the EU’s overarching tool to achieve healthy marine waters and for the ecosystem-based management of all blue sectors. It is failing miserably in implementation and the Oceans Pact needs to address this as a priority. We need much closer alignment between the MSFD, maritime spatial planning, fisheries and other sectoral policies, with legally binding environmental targets.”
Gaëlle Haut, Surfrider Foundation Europe said:
“Despite the Marine Directive providing a holistic approach to ocean protection at the EU level, its proper implementation has fallen short due to a lack of political will and insufficient resources. It is time to strengthen it and translate our duty to protect EU seas—both for present and future generations—into concrete results and use the Marine Directive as the foundation of the Oceans Pact in all its dimensions.”
Cyrielle Goldberg, Marine Policy Officer at BirdLife Europe said:
“Despite a solid EU legal framework for the protection of our seas, the Commission’s report is clear: Member States have consistently failed to properly implement their obligations and, consequently, to ensure effective protection of the marine environment. At a time when global political instability and the alarming effects of climate change are increasingly putting European society at risk, it is urgent to reverse the trend and to invest in long-term marine protection and restoration, ensuring a healthy and prosperous future for all.”
Source: Press Release


