Maria Damanaki
European Commissioner for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries
Eat, buy and sell sustainable fish!
Launch event of the Inseparable campaign
Hamburg, 27 January 2014
Dear Mayor, Dear Ms. Flachsbarth, Dear Ulrike,
I too want to welcome you all. I see politicians, fishermen, chefs and journalists and many young people.
We're here, because we have
something in common: an aspiration to make things better; the courage to
desire a better world to leave to our children.
Together we have climbed a steep
mountain and it was a difficult climb. When I took office I found a
common fisheries policy that was cumbersome and outdated. A policy which
prescribed everything top down and that often let vested interests
prevail over environmental considerations and jobs.
In the past we assumed that
whatever we did, the oceans would find a way to regenerate. But we went
too far. We became entangled in the vicious circle of overfishing: less
fish in the sea, more fishing, even less fish in the sea.
Breaking it took years of
preparation and negotiations. We had to get 28 countries to agree to a
quantum leap reform. And we succeeded.
We totally turned the policy around by
- stopping overfishing,
- putting an end to discarding,
- stopping top down decisions, making room for regionalization and giving the stakeholders a role in decision making
- for the first time ever we have sustainable standards in our international policy.
It is in many ways a
'sea change'. Even the most Eurosceptic analysts called it a "triumph of
common sense". This would not have been possible without the support of
one of the most environment and business-conscious nations on earth:
this one.
Germany has been an ally from day
one: I would therefore like to express my sincere thanks to the German
government, who was a staunch supporter of this reform and has shown
leadership. For the first time ever the European Parliament was part of
the decision making and here is the key Member, Ms Rodust, who deserves
her own special "thank you!", because she helped to bring about this
reform. Furthermore I would like to thank also the colleagues in the
Ministry of Food and Agriculture for their tireless efforts to get this
reform concluded. Last but not least the German fishing industry
deserves a big thank you, because they looked at our proposals and while
they admitted that there are hurdles that need to be overcome, they
came onboard early on...
You, the citizens of Germany, can
be truly proud of all these people, as they helped us convince other
nations to embark on real change. This country always knew, that
healthier fish stocks bring higher catches, more money for those who
fish and more jobs onboard and onshore.
And now that we are implementing
this reform is it again Germany that is leading by asking that we
achieve sustainable fishing for Baltic herring already in 2014. I can
only support this. It is not a matter of the environment versus the
economy. In this business, the environment is the economy. There is no
separating the two. Now Fisheries Ministers of Europe understand this
and just one month ago they unanimously agreed fish quotas at
sustainable level. The decision means we have tripled the number of fish
stocks fished at sustainable level in 2014 to 27 and for 2015 we can
reach 30 fish stocks fished sustainably. If you consider that we started
with 9 fish stocks only a few years ago this is a massive achievement.
But there is another actor in this historic reform: you.
I'm talking of course of public
pressure. Your alliance between fishermen, retailers and citizens, your
campaigns, your TV documentaries have given boost to make this reform a
reality and you deserve my thank you.
Now that you have conquered, you
must continue your leadership. As informed citizens, as members of the
industry, as retailers, restaurant owners, or as consumers: please sell,
buy, cook and eat only sustainable fish.
How? You may ask. You just have to survive a few speeches. Then you can go off and taste what sustainability means.
Now you have the power to make our mountain climb worth the effort: your choices can change the face of fisheries.
At the end of the day, our policy
and your consensus are just like fish and fisherman, environmental
protection and economic sustainability: "inseparable".
