• This Thursday, the European Commission, the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union are meeting in trialogue to discuss issues relating to the common fisheries policy.

  • On the agenda, an amendment voted in Strasbourg on July 12, which aims to ban the demersal seine in French territorial waters in the Channel and in the North Sea, where it is still practiced.

  • The case is reminiscent of that of electric fishing, another fishing technique used mainly by the Dutch, but banned in Europe since the summer of 2021. The grievances are the same for the demersal seine, too formidable to the point of to be anti-environmental and disloyal.

Bis repetita… Since July 1, 2021, electric fishing has been banned in Europe.

The epilogue of a fight of several years, carried out by French fishermen with the support of NGOs like Bloom.

It consists of sending electric pulses to fish buried in the seabed to stun them and thus better dislodge them.

Formidably effective, but far from having no impact on underwater biodiversity.

It is another fishing practice, considered just as problematic, which is now in the crosshairs: the demersal seine.

This afternoon, a trilogue – negotiations which bring together the European Commission, the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union – will focus on the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP).

Five seiners to rake the surface of Paris in one day

On the agenda is an amendment by EELV MEP Caroline Roose, voted by one vote by the European Parliament on June 12.

It aims to ban this fishing technique in the French territorial waters of Normandy and Hauts-de-France, in the band of twelve nautical miles (about 22 km).

"Which would amount to completely banishing it from our waters since the practice is already elsewhere," says the MEP.

The demersal seine?

Laëtitia Bisiaux, project manager at Bloom, speaks of this technique as an evolution of the trawl, this funnel-shaped net that is dragged by ships.

“For the demersal seine, we have two cables, like two arms, which surround a very large area, up to 3 km², she explains.

These cables are placed on the seabed and vibrated, causing a wall of sediment and sound that will frighten the fish and push them to reach the center of the circled area.

Gradually, the cables are tightened, folding the catches towards the net which only has to be reassembled.

»


4/15: The demersal seine is a fishing method akin to trawling that has already devastated the English Channel and is bringing coastal fishermen from the North and Normandy to their knees.

pic.twitter.com/cub8qic7ZU

– Laetitia Bisiaux (@Laeti_Bisiaux) September 9, 2022

Access to this content has been blocked to respect your choice of consent

By clicking on "

I ACCEPT

", you accept the deposit of cookies by external services and will thus have access to the content of our partners

I ACCEPT

And to better remunerate 20 Minutes, do not hesitate to accept all cookies, even for one day only, via our "I accept for today" button in the banner below.

More information on the Cookie Management Policy page.



Here again, it works too well to be environmentally sustainable, if only because of the quantities of fish that this technique can bring up over large areas.

"In a single day of fishing, five seiners can rake an area equivalent to the area of ​​Paris", compares a group of 120 French deputies, senators and European deputies who signed a column published in

Le Monde

on September 21, for ask for a ban on demersal seining in all French territorial waters.

The Dutch, once again the most fond of it?

Electric fishing or demersal seine… Each time, the Dutch are the most fond of these techniques.

“They have been engaged in a technological race for several years, deplores Claire Nouvian, founder of Bloom.

It is up to the person who will develop the method to capture the maximum amount of resources and as quickly as possible.

And too bad for the others?

This is the fear of this group of French parliamentarians, worried about seeing "these enormous Dutch ships", after "having emptied the North Sea and then falling back on the Eastern Channel", "melting like predators on the English Channel West,” they wrote.

“Like electric fishing in the past”, points out Claire Nouvian.

Sébastien Jumel, PCF deputy for Seine-Maritime and former mayor of Dieppe, does not describe the demersal seine as only anti-ecological, but also anti-social.

In particular in France, which has retained an artisanal fishery.

According to Bloom, in April 2020, it still represents 70% of the fleet of metropolitan fishing vessels and 52% of jobs in the sector.

“By their size, these vessels are subservient to a territory and are therefore the first to be impacted by these purse seiners which empty one fishing area one day and go to another the next day, continues Sébastien Jumel.

It is unfair competition.

»

French fishermen ready to go back?

It is not all the same the fact that of Dutch ships.

Seventy-five seiners have licenses to fish in the English Channel, "but only 54 vessels are active", counts Laëtitia Bisiaux.

In the consignment, Bloom has 19 trawlers flying the French flag, including 5 belonging to Dutch shipowners.

That leaves 14 others… “Very often, they have converted to remain competitive and after having alerted the public authorities for years to the problems of cohabitation with foreign purse seiners, continues the project manager to Bloom.

The first letters to this effect from the regional fishing committees date from the beginning of the 2010s. They have never been heard.

»

Fishermen on the Normandy shores would be ready to back down.

This is what emerges from a survey organized in mid-September by the Normandy Regional Fisheries Committee (CRPMEM) and the Normandy Fishermen's Organization (OPN).

Of the 205 fishermen who responded, 98% said they were in favor of banning demersal seine fishing for all fishing vessels, regardless of their flag, in French territorial waters.

France against the tide this Thursday?

However, this would not be the position that France should take to this trilogue.

“On the telephone, the Secretary of State for the Sea [Hervé Berville] told me that he agreed with the proposal we made, but refused to implement it, regrets Sébastien Jumel.

He assures us that this is not the right legislative vehicle, nor the time to do so.

However, he does not propose a plan B." Claire Nouvian does not understand the French position any more, "except, once again, to win the case of the industrial fishing lobbies, although very much in the minority" , she berates.

For the director of Bloom, it is indeed a societal choice that is at stake: “that of the fishing model that we want in France”.

“Artisanal, which sustains our ports, our auctions, generate local jobs on land… or industrial, in the hands of a handful of boats which empty the resource of a territory to exploit it elsewhere”, abounds Sébastien Jumel.

The NGO director and the MP remind us that time is running out if we want to keep the first model standing.

They both cite, as a bad sign, the closure of the Dunkirk fish auction, one of the three private fish markets in France, in October 2020, due to the lack of member artisanal fishermen being able to supply it with sufficient catches.

Bloom sees in it the consequence of ten years of electric fishing which it took too long to ban.

Planet

Fishing: Bottom trawling in marine protected areas… Towards the end of a “European aberration”?

Planet

Electric shocks to catch fish, a fake good idea?

  • Planet

  • Sin

  • Ocean

  • Sea

  • Pays Basque

  • Normandy

  • Hauts-de-France