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Date:
7th December, 2007
Government plans “more and and bigger fish” to catch
New measures to
maintain and grow the £1 billion recreational sea angling (RSA) industry
and provide “more and bigger fish” in the sea to support it, are
revealed by the government today (Friday).
It follows a four-year campaign by anglers to put recreational angling
high up on Whitehall’s problem agenda for the fishing industry.
The twin objectives of Defra’s Recreational Sea Angling Strategy for
England are to “provide more and bigger fish within a healthy and
sustainable ecosystem and environment” and “maintain and increase
participation in RSA on a sustainable basis…across all groups in society
to provide socio-economic benefits.”
It is seen as a positive move to assuage anglers who were outraged last
month when the fisheries minister (Jonathan Shaw) dumped his his
predecessor’s commitment to increase the minimum legal landing size for
sea bass to conserve the species.
Instead the minister consigned this valuable stock to continued and
almost unrestricted commercial predation allowing the slaughter of huge
numbers of immature fish before they were even big enough to spawn.
Today’s strategy is intended as a guideline, primarily for the 12 sea
fisheries committees which regulate the marine environment, including
fishing, for six miles out around the coast of England and Wales.
Defra says it wants to “realise real improvements” for anglers before
any control of their activities, such as licensing. It concedes that
“large and sustainable fish stocks and a healthy marine environment are
the primary elements which affect the angling experience.”
Defra says there should be better access to angling sites, more boat
launching facilities, artificial reefs to attract fish and areas of the
sea reserved for angling or where only limited commercial fishing was
allowed.
The strategy admits that angling is under-represented in sea fisheries
management despite its increasingly significant social and economic
contribution to the nation. Managements at national, regional and local
levels should recognise the needs of RSA alongside other stakeholders.
The strategy idea came from the conservation group of the National
Federation of Sea Anglers in 2004 and a wide group of sea anglers helped
draft it.
”Ministers and civil servants had no idea then what a sea angler looked
like, what they did or how valuable their activities were,” said Richard
Ferré, chairman of the National Federation of Sea Anglers. “They have
little doubt about that now.”
The anglers’ strategy was taken up by Defra’s coastal waters policy
group and presented in detail to all the main stakeholders including
commercial fishing, sea fisheries committees and environmental
organisations.
“Discussions were vigourous but professional and a document with real
positives for anglers has now emerged,” said Mr. Ferré.
“It calls for management plans at a local level for the species of fish
most important to RSA, makes a strong case for better control of
trawling and gill netting close to the shore and anglers’ desire for the
“golden mile” concept of no netting within a mile of the shore.”
He said the strategy calls for sea fisheries committees to be given the
objective of developing sea angling, a duty they do not have today, and
to make decisions based on socio-economic factors not just on concerns
for commercial fishing.
The strategy contains some potential threats to angling, notably
licensing and limits on the number of fish anglers could take home.
However, these, can only happen under the Marine Bill due to be
published next year.
It also calls for co-operation between anglers, sea fisheries
committees, local authorities and others in developing voluntary sea
angling codes of conduct and best practice.
Mr. Ferré urged all sea anglers to support the NFSA in its continuing
engagement with government to achieve its goal of improving sea angling
mostly through “more and bigger fish”.
ENDS
Alan Brothers, NFSA, Tel 01273 471 496, mobile 07957 870 616
abrothers1037395@aol.com
National
Federation of Sea Anglers
Hamlyn House, Mardle Way, Buckfastleigh, Devon TQ11 0NS
Chief Executive: David Rowe
Tel: 01364 644 643 Fax 01364 644 486 e-mail: ho@nfsa.org.uk
www.nfsa.org.uk
Promoting and protecting the interests of sea anglers nationwide
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