Fisheries: fair competition needed between imports and European producers

Published: 23 June 2010 y., Wednesday

Žvejybos laivai
Fish imports play a crucial role in supplying the European market, yet fisheries and aquaculture are strategic sectors that do not lend themselves to a purely free-trade approach, believes the EP Fisheries Committee. In a draft resolution adopted on Tuesday, MEPs say that imports should meet the same standards as European-produced fish and fishery products should be classified as "sensitive" in trade talks.

The resolution on the EU fisheries import regime, drafted by Alain Cadec (EPP, FR), is intended to contribute to the debate on the upcoming reform of the common fisheries policy.

Imports meet 60% of EU demand, acknowledges the resolution.  However, Europe needs to retain "environmentally sustainable and economically viable fishery and aquaculture sectors" to help preserve the cultural identity of the regions concerned, provide jobs, and supply safe, good-quality food. 

Market liberalisation is already having a damaging impact on the local economy in certain regions, which are unable to find their own markets. Moreover, the massive influx of imports in an environment of unfair competition could influence the eating habits of the Europeans, who in a time of crisis could turn to cheaper and lower-quality products, says the committee.

Trade and customs policy

Reasonable, adjustable customs protection should continue to be a legitimate instrument to regulate imports, argue MEPs. It is tariff protection that gives meaning to the preferences granted to developing countries.

The Fisheries Committee believes that responsibility for leading the EU's trade talks on fishery and aquaculture products should be transferred from the Trade Commissioner to the Commissioner for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries. It also demands that fishery and aquaculture products be treated as sensitive products in the WTO’s talks on gradual tariff reduction. The Commission should ensure that any agreement on subsidies in the fisheries sector does not place European producers at a competitive disadvantage.

Strict environmental and social standards

One of the key aims of fisheries policy should be to ensure that imports meet the same standards as EU production in every respect: environmental, social, health and quality. Agreements granting trade preferences should include credible mechanisms for monitoring whether environmental and social commitments are met and allow for preferences to be suspended or withdrawn. The Commission is asked to use all the tools available to ensure that the main importing countries comply with the basic international labour law.

Better informed consumers would make different choices

Convinced that European consumers would often make different choices if they were better informed about the true nature of products on sale (their origin and production or catch conditions), MEPs call for stringent and transparent criteria for quality, traceability and labelling. They also demand a vigilant approach to products from new, particularly intensive, types of aquaculture and call for a critical study of the health implications.

Lastly, the Fisheries Committee repeats its call for an urgent revision of the outdated common market organisation in fishery products, so that it contributes to guaranteeing earnings in the sector, ensuring market stability and increasing the added value of European products.    

The resolution was adopted by the committee unanimously and comes before the full Parliament in July.


Šaltinis: www.europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Gold Driller Top Certified for Bulgarian Investments

Canadian gold driller and miner Dundee Precious Metals Inc. received Monday first-class investment certificate from Bulgarian government more »

Czech company purchases 3rd portion of Baku-Supsa oil

The Unipetrol Refinery company of the Czech Republic has purchased this year's third portion of Azeri Light profit oil to be exported by the State Oil Company (SOCAR) more »

Opec expresses concern about rising oil prices

Seeking to cool market sentiment, the head of Opec on Sunday said the organisation is concerned about stubbornly high prices that defy what he described as a well-supplied market and adequate crude stocks worldwide more »

Direct access, remote control

On February 17 the German bank Dresdner Bank AG became the first remote member of the Warsaw Stock Exchange more »

Morocco, Poland to strengthen economic relations

Polish businessmen convened, in Cassablanca Wednesday, with members of the Casablanca Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Services to discuss means to reinforce bilateral trade cooperation more »

Banks seen unlikely to repeat stellar performance of 2004

Hungary’s banks posted record profits in 2004, driven mainly by a surge in lending to households more »

Bulgaria's HVB Biochim, Hebros Bank Merge

Bank Austria Creditanstalt (BA-CA) has acquired a 89.92% stake and HVB Biochim Bank - a 9.99% of stake in Bulgaria's Hebros Bank more »

A memorandum on cooperation

Russia and Kazakhstan sign cooperation memo more »

EBRD hopes loans will aid Ukraine

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is planning a raft of new investments in Ukraine to underpin the country's democratic transformation under President Viktor Yushchenko more »

Geneva motor show reflects lack of drive in Europe

Peugeot Citroën, the French cars group, is planning to turn its back on western Europe and concentrate all its investment in new plant in eastern Europe more »