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27 June 2001
Greenpeace increases pressure to stop factory trawlers, while the
Norwegian government blames whales for declining fish stocks
Amsterdam - Greenpeace is demanding the Norwegian Prime Minister
Jens Stoltenberg deny Norwegian and foreign factory trawlers permission
to enter Norwegian fishing grounds. Greenpeace activists holding
a 100 square meters large trawling net and banners reading "Stop
the factory trawlers" waited for the Norwegian Prime Minister to
leave a governmental meeting scheduled for today in Bodö.
"We can no longer stand still watching while Norway allows industrial
factory trawlers to catch huge amounts of small fish and re-flag
their vessels as they please, in order to fish outside set quotas,"
said Frode Pleym, Greenpeace campaigner in Bodö.

© Greenpeace
The fish caught by these Norwegian and foreign factory trawlers
is mainly cod, which is frozen and ends up on markets across Europe.
While the Norwegian government claims that whaling activities are
necessary for the survival of the coastal communities in Norway,
Greenpeace showed in a report that a revised fishery's policy should
be the priority for the government and would have more positive
impact on the economies of the coastal communities. (1)
Last week, Greenpeace prevented the Russian-flagged factory trawler
Arctic Corsair, owned by the British shipping company Boyd Line,
from leaving for the Barents Sea to fish small cod. (2) The action
was part of Greenpeace activities in support of coastal fisheries
in Norway.
The United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organisation (UN FAO)
has estimated that 70 percent of the world's fish stocks are either
fully exploited, overexploited or in crisis. Over the past three
years, ICES (International Council for the Exploration of the Sea)
scientists have recommended a relatively small catch of cod in order
to save the stock from depletion, since the cod stock today is at
a level that is not biologically sustainable.
"It is inadmissible that Norway allows fishing quotas to factory
trawlers that catch fish too small to have reproduced. Allowing
a British factory trawler to fish on both EU and Russian quotas
over the same year shows total disregard for scientist's recommendations
to protect stocks," said Pleym. "Once all the fish is gone, it will
be too late to act, and the coastal communities will pay the price."
Like many other factory trawlers, the Arctic Corsair is producing
fish for fillet onboard. This has a negative impact on land-based
industries dependent on fishing and in the long run endangers coastal
communities as a whole. Greenpeace argues that the Norwegian coastal
fleet should be receiving the resources instead.
Notes:
(1) The report can be found in Norwegian on www.greenpeace.no
(2) Greenpeace has documentation showing that most of the fish
caught in May were fish which had not had time to reproduce.
Take
action and tell Norway to stop factory trawling.
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