EU plans to pay fishermen for collecting plastic from the sea
May 8th, 2011 - 7:18 pm ICT by IANSLondon, May 8 (IANS) The European Union (EU) plans to pay the continent’s fishing fleets for collecting plastic as part of an initiative that will help reduce pollution in sea.
As per under consideration proposals from EU commissioner for fisheries Maria Damanaki, fishermen will be paid to land plastic to provide them with income and reduce pressure on dwindling fish stocks, the Sunday Express reported.
Vessels that clear up plastic will initially be subsidised by the EU. The hope is that the practice will become self-sustaining as the value of recycled plastics increases.
Damanaki will unveil a trial project in the Mediterranean this month, which will see fishermen equipped with nets to collect plastic debris.
The plan, as well as an attempt to handle seaborne waste, is also aimed at pacifying Europe’s fishing industry over a potential prohibition on the wasteful practice of dumping low-value fish at sea.
Fleets fear of losing money by not being able to throw away lower-value catch for which they say there is little demand. A million tonnes are thrown back each year in the North Sea alone.
Commissioner Damanaki said: “Ending this practice of throwing away edible fish is in the interest of fishermen and consumers. It has to happen, we cannot have consumers afraid to eat fish because they hate this problem of discards.
“People (in the fishing industry) feel insecure because this is a change. That is why they need incentives.”
The industry will contribute to the pilot but it is not known how much each fisherman will get. Payments will depend on tonnage and the recycling market.
Plastics 2020 Challenge, an industry campaign that supports recycling and preventing litter, is backing the move.
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Tags: continent, edible fish, fish stocks, fisheries, fisherman, fishermen, fishing fleets, fishing industry, incentives, industry campaign, mediterranean, north sea, plastic debris, prohibition, recycled plastics, recycling market, sunday express, tonnage, tonnes, wasteful practice