Govt urged to apologise for pushing fishing firms to brink of ‘collapse’
LONDON: The Environment Secretary has faced demands from Labour to apologise for pushing many fishing businesses to the brink of “collapse” via the government’s Brexit deal with the EU.
Shadow environment secretary Luke Pollard added that the sector has “lost trust and confidence” in the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).
But Cabinet minister George Eustice insisted the deal has allowed the UK to “regain control of regulations in our waters”, and volumes of trade are back up to “around 85 per cent of normal volumes” following a challenging start to the year.
Conservative backbenchers also pressed the Environment Secretary to ease red tape facing UK fishers. The exchanges came as the National Federation of Fishermen’s Organisations expressed fears that the Scottish industry is being given “priority” by the Government ahead of the Scottish Parliament elections in May and with a “second referendum on the union hanging in the balance”.
It added: “Likewise, fears are mounting south of the border, that the lion’s share of additional quota secured as part of that Christmas Eve deal will be used to placate nationalist sentiments in Scotland.”
Speaking in the Commons, Labour’s Pollard said: “Fishing boats are tied up, fish exporters are tied up with red tape. Fishing was promised a sea of opportunity but the reality is many fishing businesses are on the verge of collapse. Much of the so-called extra fish may not even exist or be able to be caught by British boats.
“The fishing industry feels betrayed. Isn’t now the time for the Secretary of State to apologise to the fishing industry for the Brexit deal his government negotiated?”
Eustice replied: “I’ve made clear all along that the government had hoped to get closer to a zonal attachment sharing arrangement in that first multi-annual agreement, but there is a significant uplift of 25 per cent of the fish that the EU has historically caught in our waters that they’ve been required to forfeit as the price for continued access.
“That additional fishing quota is worth £140 million.” But Pollard added: “There was no apology, no sense of reality from the Secretary of State. He can’t wriggle out of this one, the net is closing in on him.
“The reality is that fishing has lost trust and confidence in the actions of Defra for all the broken promises.”
Eustice defended the government’s deal on fishing and said there had been some new “administrative processes” in place which had proved “challenging” for the sector in January, with a support fund put in place.
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