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Struan Stevenson |
SCOTTISH Euro MP, Struan Stevenson today condemned the "red tape" that is proving a barrier to growth within Europe’s fish farming industry and called for the regulations that govern it to be simplified. Otherwise, he says, the sector is in danger of being dominated by competition from non-EU countries, putting jobs at risk.
Speaking today at a conference on Europe’s aquaculture industry in Billund, Denmark, Mr Stevenson warned: “We have allowed our non-EU competitors to assume dominance in the sector and we have seen our indigenous industry haemorrhage jobs to countries outside the EU. We import almost 50% of our seafood needs when we are perfectly capable of producing this food ourselves.
“This red tape and bureaucracy and the endless production of legislative directives in Europe are a gift to our competitors in China, Japan, Chile, Vietnam and elsewhere.
“At a time when demand for healthy fish products is rising internationally, while marine fish stocks continue to decline, the opportunities for EU aquaculture to lead the world in fish farming innovation and technological development are being hampered by red tape.”
However, Mr Stevenson agreed that sound European regulation provides protection to the consumer in terms of quality and safety of fish and shellfish products. Consumer confidence was also a vitally important issue, he added, but it was a question of balance.
“The industry favours regulation, not strangulation. It is ridiculous that we apply tougher conditions to our home-grown producers than we apply to producers from outside the EU who flood our markets with products.
“We need to improve the image of fish farming, which is still regarded as polluting, wasteful in terms of the use of fish meal, disease ridden, dangerous to consumers due to marine and microbiological toxins, dangerous to wild stocks, poor for animal welfare and producing an inferior product. All of these notions are wrong, misguided and out of date.
“Our farmed fish are produced to the highest standards of any fish farms in the world and we will not do anything to undermine that.
“However, we must simplify the regulatory regime and free-up Europe’s fish farmers to reclaim their rightful place as world leaders in this exciting industry. So the targets are clear, the prospects are bright and the barriers to progress have been clearly identified. The Commission, the Parliament, the Member States and the sector need to forge a new partnership so that we can once again lead the world in fish farming.”
www.fishupdate.com is published by Special Publications. Special Publications also publish FISHupdate magazine, Fish Farmer, the Fish Industry Yearbook, the Scottish Seafood Processors Federation Diary, the Fish Farmer Handbook and a range of wallplanners.
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