EU Rewards Norway for Overfishing
The fish producer organisations are also highly critical of the EU’s role in brokering this deal, which trades access to Norwegian waters for 13,500 tonnes of ASH for Norwegian access 50,000 tonnes of blue whiting. Dominic Rihan, CEO of the KFO says Norway relies on access to the blue whiting fishery in our EEZ at this time of year.
“This is because the stock is in prime condition and generally, they can only catch less than 5% of their enormous blue whiting quota in their own waters. Worse still, they have been systematically overfishing mackerel – a shared stock Ireland relies on heavily – and putting the future of the stock at risk,” says Rihan. “The EU should be confronting that behaviour. Instead, they are rewarding it with access to valuable fish off Ireland’s coast.”
“A non-EU coastal state gains, while the Irish fishing industry is left with scraps. This is another example of Ireland being treated unfairly in EU fisheries negotiations,”
Coincidentally, Dominic Rihan, CEO of the KFO and Aodh O’Donnell are currently attending critical talks in Copenhagen on mackerel quota sharing arrangements. Rihan says it is “imperative that a comprehensive sharing agreement and level playing field is achieved for Ireland, and to finalise our quota for 2026.”
“Our coastal communities have already endured significant cuts and restructuring,” he said. “They cannot continue to absorb unequal arrangements that transfer wealth from Irish waters to others.”
The two organisations are calling for full transparency around how the agreement was negotiated and approved by the EU Commission. “We must face the fact that Ireland’s seafood sector and coastal communities are being disregarded at European level,” says Aodh O Donnell. “There’s a need for an urgent reassessment of Ireland’s position within future EU fisheries talks.”
“Ireland’s fishing industry deserves fair treatment, strong representation and sustainable management of stocks,” says O’Donnell. “This deal fails on all three counts.”