
The Scottish Sea Angling Conservation Network deserves all the success Continue reading

The Scottish Sea Angling Conservation Network deserves all the success Continue reading

Argyll hosts some of the country’s, if not the world’s, most spectacular coastline and scenery. Continue reading
Jim Mather, Argyll’s MSP, has welcomed the announcement that 67 Continue reading
Well deserved support has come to the energetic Scottish Sea Angling Continue reading

A Marine Bill for Scotland was the title for a conference Continue reading
An initiative seeking to create a long-term sustainable future for sea Continue reading
The Sea Life Centre at Loch Lomond Shores near Ballach is hosting a session for members and guests of the Scottish Sea Angling Conservation Network (SSACN) at 2pm on Monday 9th March.
James Thorburn will present a summary of his findings on a research project on the Common Skate and after his presentation SSACN and SNH (Scottish Natural Heritage) will provide an update on proposed future work on Common Skate, Spur Dog and Tope. This will be followed by an opportunity to discuss both projects and issues arising from them.
The aim of James Thorburn’s project was to get more understanding of the life history characteristics and behaviour of the Commons Skate as well as assessing the population around the Isle of Mull and Firth of Lorn. His report will incude his major findings and consider matters like growth rate, annual depth migration, maturation, annual geographical movement, population composition, fishing mortality and economic importance.
As well as this, Thorburn’s research also focused on the economic value of the charter boat industry based in Oban and running skate angling trips. He looked at the overall value of the industry and its financial impact on other businesses in the area.
SSACN members and guests are cordially invited but, to help the catering provision for the event, are asked to RSVP with numbers by emailing contact@ssacn.org
For ayone who can’t get there but is interested in the research findings, the report can be found on the SSACN website and in the SSACN Reading Room of the SSACN Library.
Anxieties about the impact on Scottish recreational sea anglers of EC proposed Fisheries Control Regulations rumble on.
Though the EC regulations were supposedly aimed at the commercial catching sector, British MEPs, the Scottish Sea Angling Conservation Network (SSACN) and other organisations believe they were badly thought out to the point where they were unworkable. In particular, it was felt that Article 47 within them could have resulted in every pleasure vessel which ever went fishing having to be registered and report its catches.
This would impose a level of bureaucratic interference into sea angling that would have a disastrous impact on the tourism sector and cause substantial job losses in the businesses serving the sea angling sector – and without providing any meaningful benefits to fish stocks.
The level of concern voiced was such that Joe Borg, the EU Fisheries Commissioner, issued a press statement claiming the proposed legislation had been misinterpreted. As For Argyll reported, he said: ‘Let me make clear once and for all that the hobby angler who catches a few kilos of fish every time he goes out fishing and uses it for his private consumption, will not be covered by the control regulation…
‘The European Union would be crazy if it tried to control millions of hobby anglers and would not implement such a ludicrous system in its plans to update controls on the commercial fishing industry’.
SSACN could only agree with such a statement, yet Mr Borg went on to say that the rules would concern recreational anglers on board vessels in the open sea who take fish which are under multi-annual plans – as this includes hake, cod, plaice and sole.
There is clearly confusion in the envisaging of the practicalities of implementing the proposed regulations with fairness and consistency of intent.
According to Ian Burrett, Vice Chairman of SSACN, ‘Whilst we welcome this apparent change of heart, we must remain on guard until the proposals match Mr. Borg’s statement’.
Regarding Mr Borg’s assertion that recreational sea angers have a serious affect on fish mortality, Mr Burrett continued: ‘SSACN have asked the Commission to present such data (to back up Mr Borg’s assertion), as we are certain that this is not the case in Scottish waters. We are equally confident that the fish taken home by all recreational anglers will in no way approach the 2 million tons of fish discarded annually under the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP).
‘The Scottish Marine Directorate has told SSACN that Article 47 from the control regulations must be taken at face value until such times there is an official amendment to the article’.
The Scottish Government seems to see the picture in the same light as the SSACN. A Governemnt spokesman told the SSACN: ‘We have made it clear that we believe that the Common Fisheries Policy will never provide the ideal means of managing Scottish fisheries – and the last thing we need is further complications. We should be trying to loosen the CFP’s grip on our fisheries, not expand it.
‘The current proposal as it stands will have a significant effect on those recreational fisheries which make a substantial contribution to our local economies.
‘While the overall aim is to ensure activities contributing towards mortality are accounted for, we do not feel this bureaucratic and cumbersome approach is the right way to go about it.
‘We will be working closely with the Commission and angling representatives as the review of control regulation proceeds to ensure our views are reflected, and that only justifiable and proportionate measures are adopted’.
Recreational sea angling is an important leisure and tourism activity contriobutig to Argyll’s economy. Until some clarity emerges from this confusion and until this sector is protected from legislation that shoud never legitimately attempt to embrace it, eyes cannot be taken off the ball.
One of the maddest examples of the EU’s immersion in a bureaucracy too often detached from realities on the ground – or on the water in this case – has been the plan to include sea angling catches in the quotas system.
This would have brought recreational sea angling within the controversial Common Fisheries Policy, seeing every fish caught included in annual quotas for species like cod, ling and pollock, even if they were returned to the sea.
Now Joe Borg, EU Fisheries Commissioner, has ruled out the planned controls on recreational sea anglers and will alter the wording of the regulations to confirm this. He has recognised that the rules were intended for those who catch for profit and not recreational anglers who take very little and only for their own use.
The sport is a major contributor to Scotland’s economy and, as For Argyll has reported before, of even greater value than golf. It brings in around £150million per annum but had been threatened with virtual extinction by this planned move from Brussels.
Economists from Glasgow Caledonian University have completed a report on the economic impact of sea angling, commissioned by the Scottish Government.
On the day that Sportscotland announced an annual award of £20,000 for coaching in sea angling in addition to £25,000 to develop participation in all angling disciplines, the report’s evaluation of the contribution of sea angling generated excitement in the sport. Its estimated worth to the economy is almost as much as golf and a great deal more than freshwater angling.
The Scottish Government will not publish the report until early in 2009. However, the Environment and Fisheries Minister Richard Lochhead, has now met with senior members of the Scottish Sea Angling Conservation Network (SSACN). A major pressure group, SSACN has been campaigning strongly for greater recognition for anglers in inshore sea fisheries management.
Steve Bastiman, the group’s Chair, described the meeting as ‘very positive’, saying: ‘We are reassured that the Government recognises the value of recreational sea angling’.
The SSACN estimates that Scotland loses around £20 million a year from angling festivals, competitions and tourist trips that have to be abandoned because of what they see as a uncontrolled take of certain species like conger eel, pollack, skate, tope and porbeagle.
It is lobbying for the implementation of its plan to develop ‘angling regeneration centres’ in Argyll’s Loch Etive, the Clyde and the Solway and Moray Firths.
Mike Horn, President of the Scottish Federation of Sea Anglers and also a member of the Angling Development Board for Scotland sees the report’s conclusions as ‘very reassuring’. He says that: ‘It underlines our need to take on a Development Officer and reinforces the absolute need to get kids off the street and to provide us with the assistance to do that’.
Interestingly, the same team from Glasgow Caledonian reported on freshwater angling in 2004 – salmon, trout and coarse fishing – finding that this sport generated £113 million per annum and supported 2,800 jobs.
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