Today, 4th August, the UK becomes dependent on fish from
elsewhere. What this means is that, if the UK were to consume only
the fish it catches in EU waters then at current consumption levels
its supply would now be exhausted. The UK has effectively eaten its
last fish of the year, and henceforth eats other countries' fish.
If you want to see how we've worked this out, have a look at
our Fish Dependence, launched July
9th.
Wrecking the Ocean
The depletion of our fish, which we have relied on for
centuries, and their replacement with imports and distant water
fishing, has been happening silently but systematically, from the
depths of the sea to the supermarket shelves we see every day. Few
of us think about what this really means, or even that it is
happening. But, in fact, the story of our oceans, and how we are
wrecking the brightness of our future, has all the ingredients of
an epic; one of an incredible evolutionary abundance trying to
survive in the face of centuries of human overexploitation.
In the EU 72% of fish stocks are in an overfished state, with
most of the rest 'fully exploited'. Yet consumers are demanding
more and more fish. The consequence is an increasing dependence on
fish imports.
Increasing Fish Dependence
One way to monitor this change is through mapping where our fish
comes from, our 'fish dependence'. We have reframed this as
equivalent to how many days the fish on our plates comes from EU
water and for how many it comes from someone else's water. What we
find are dates creeping earlier and earlier in the year, meaning
that we are less able to provide for our own consumption, and more
dependent on someone else. As you can see below, the UK is fish
dependent on 4th August- just over half way through the
year, and two weeks earlier than in 2000.
UK can lead the EU in sustainable fishing
The UK has actually been placed in a relatively better position
than it's European neighbours. While the majority of UK stocks
continue to be overexploited, some
have made a recovery.
This is not enough. A radical change is desperately needed in
order to get our fish stocks back in shape and reconcile
consumption with available resource. The reform of the Common
Fisheries Policy (CFP) is an opportunity we can ill afford to miss.
Some of our demands are to:
- Reduce fishing fleet capacity to reconcile it with available
resources; improving data collection, transparency and reporting;
and prioritising scientific advice in determining catch
quotas.
- Create a context in which being profitable is aligned with
doing the right thing, by making access to resources conditional on
social and environmental criteria.
- Promote responsible consumption among all EU consumers.
- Use public funds to deliver social and environmental goods by
investing in environmentally constructive measures, research, and
stakeholder involvement, as well as enforcing sustainable quotas
and practices both in the EU and imports from non-EU sources.
In order for this to happen, policymakers need to look beyond
the short-term costs that could result from reform and give
priority to the long-term benefits that healthy marine resources
will provide.
Aniol Esteban is Head of Environmental Economics and Rupert
Crilly is Researcher, Natural Economies at the New Economic
Foundation.