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EU Draw a Line Under Deep-Sea Bottom Trawling

PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2016 1:25 pm
Author: Piling
BRUSSELS—Conservation organisations are welcoming the agreement reached on 30 June by the European Parliament, Council of Ministers, and European Commission on key provisions for a new European Union (EU) regulation on deep-sea fishing that includes a ban on bottom trawling below 800 metres and would close areas where vulnerable marine ecosystems are known or likely to occur.

The agreement comes four years after the Commission published a proposal for a new regulation on deep-sea fishing in the north-east Atlantic Ocean and two and a half years since the Parliament agreed to its position. Luxembourg, which held the rotating EU presidency for the second half of 2015, received a mandate from the Council of the EU’s 28 fisheries ministers in November to commence negotiations with the Parliament and Commission. Those discussions were concluded under The Netherlands, which assumed the presidency in January.

“This agreement goes a good way towards meeting the commitments made by the EU at the U.N. General Assembly and applying them to protect deep-sea ecosystems in EU waters,” said Matthew Gianni of the Deep Sea Conservation Coalition. “We urge vigorous implementation of the regulation once it is formally adopted and encourage the EU to continue working with other countries to enhance the protection of deep-sea ecosystems in international waters and to set science-based catch and bycatch limits for deep-sea fisheries in the north-east Atlantic.”

“Hundreds of scientists and hundreds of thousands of EU citizens called for limits to destructive deep-sea bottom trawling,” said Uta Bellion, director of The Pew Charitable Trusts’ European marine programme. “We welcome the decision by the Council and Parliament to heed this call, thank the Commission for its focus on deep-sea conservation, and congratulate the Luxembourg and Netherlands presidencies for securing this agreement.”

The European Parliament and Council are expected to adopt the final regulation later this year.

Notes to editors:
The Deep Sea Conservation Coalition is an organisation of more than 70 non-governmental environmental organisations, fishers’ groups, and law and policy institutes that are committed to protecting the deep sea.

The Pew Charitable Trusts is driven by the power of knowledge to solve today’s most challenging problems. Learn more at www.pewtrusts.org

The EU has one of the largest deep-sea fishing fleets in the world. Bottom trawlers drag huge, weighted nets along the seafloor destroying deep-water coral, sponge, and other vulnerable habitats that have flourished for thousands of years and whose destruction compromises the capacity of deep-sea ecosystems to sequester carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

The current regulation for the management of EU deep-sea fisheries has failed to maintain most deep-sea stocks inside safe biological limits and to restore some of the most depleted fish populations in the region. It has also failed to protect vulnerable deep-sea marine ecosystems from highly destructive fishing practices. Numerous scientific papers and reports have consistently identified bottom-trawl fishing as the greatest threat to deep-sea coral and sponge ecosystems.

The prohibition of bottom trawling below 800 metres is a compromise reached between legislators who rejected any form of ban on bottom trawling and those who supported a ban below 600 metres, which, according to scientific research, would best protect vulnerable deep-sea ecosystems and conserve deep-sea species.



http://eu.savethehighseas.org/eu-decisi ... -trawling/

Good news for the seas. :ymapplause:

France was opposed to forbid such fishing. Eu imposed it. Without a such 'dictatorship' most of countries don't care of ecology.

(And that's the reason for the ban of vacuum cleaner and non economical bulb lights in UK, I guess).

Re: EU Draw a Line Under Deep-Sea Bottom Trawling

PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2016 10:01 pm
Author: Anthea
Piling wrote:http://eu.savethehighseas.org/eu-decision-makers-draw-a-line-under-deep-sea-bottom-trawling/

Good news for the seas. :ymapplause:

France was opposed to forbid such fishing. Eu imposed it. Without a such 'dictatorship' most of countries don't care of ecology.

(And that's the reason for the ban of vacuum cleaner and non economical bulb lights in UK, I guess).


As always too little too late - UK waters were overfished due to EU trawling in our waters

Worst thing that is happening to the seas is RUBBISH the seabeds are littered with mostly plastic rubbish

Vacuum cleaners use much more electricity now because instead of my previous cleaner that only needed go over the flours once and it picked up everything, it takes me ages going back and forth over the same parts of the carpet

It takes me about 3 times longer to pick up the dog hair and even then it still does not pick up all the hair.

I am now using my second cleaner under the rubbish EU not working rules - will the EU compensate me for the time wasted trying to remove dog hairs X(

I am now going to have to pay a great deal more to buy a powerful commercial cleaner - will the EU refund me for the 2 useless cleaners and the cost of a commercial cleaner X(

As I mentioned in an earlier post - people with think pile carpets have serious problems

I HATE the EU and their stupid rules X(

Re: EU Draw a Line Under Deep-Sea Bottom Trawling

PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2016 3:34 am
Author: Piling
You should try a vacuum cleaner for professional (workshop, construction site, etc). My mum is sculptor and then she has to get rid of a huge trash (stone, plaster, clay, water) and she uses one. The only inconvenience is that it has no bag but if you have a garden, you can empty it outside.

https://www.amazon.fr/aspirateur-de-cha ... 20chantier


It is not fragile, if a bit more expensive than the ordinary one. My mum bought its 15 years ago. It still works.

Re: EU Draw a Line Under Deep-Sea Bottom Trawling

PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2016 12:19 pm
Author: Anthea
From 1 September 2014, companies in the EU were banned from making or importing vacuum cleaners above 1600 watts

From 1 September 2017, all vacuum cleaners will have to be less than 900w

What am I supposed to do???

SHAVE MY DOGS

From 1 September, companies in the EU will be banned from making or importing vacuum cleaners above 1600 watts.

Hoover - based in South Wales - said that most of its cleaners were in that category.

Since July it has been replacing its models with less powerful versions, but a few of the old ones are still left on the shelves.

Elements of the directive are being challenged by the Dyson group.

The consumer organisation Which? says many of the models involved were rated as "best buys" by its researchers.

In one recent study, five of the top seven cleaners had motors of more than 1600 watts.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-28878432

Re: EU Draw a Line Under Deep-Sea Bottom Trawling

PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2016 12:28 pm
Author: Piling
This a choice : cleaning your carpets or save the Planet :p

The same for fishermen. Their job or saving seas and oceans. That's the problem with moral issue : uncomfortable.

Re: EU Draw a Line Under Deep-Sea Bottom Trawling

PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2016 12:29 pm
Author: Anthea
English adage:

"You do not know what you have got until you lose it"

2200watts :((