Pew Environment Group

Media Inquiries

If you are a journalist and would like additional information, please visit the Media Contacts page.

Media Contacts

Subscribe to News Feeds

Pew offers news delivered to your desktop via RSS feed. Subscribing is easy. To learn more or get started, follow the link below.

Subscribe to News Feeds

For The Record

When the Pew Environment Group’s work is questioned or criticized we respond through letters to the editor or op-eds.

Read Pew's Responses

Reforming EU Deep-Sea Fisheries Management

Other Resource

Resources:

The future of vulnerable deep-sea habitats remains at stake as the European Commission prepares to release a proposal on deep-sea fishing regulations at the end of this month. The current practice has serious and widespread environmental consequences for countries fishing on the high-seas, the international community, and ocean ecosystems. And time in running out.

Now, in anticipation of the Commission’s new plan, the Pew Environment Group has released a policy paper entitled, “Out of the Abyss: Transforming EU Rules to Protect the Deep Sea,” which highlights the current problems in the regulation of the EU’s deep-sea fisheries in the northeast Atlantic and provides viable solutions to improve management in this region.

Leading scientific authorities have concluded that the EU’s fisheries for deep-sea species in the northeast Atlantic are ‘outside safe biological limits,’ which means that they could eventually face extinction. The science tells us that to prevent further depletion, deep-sea fishing should be greatly reduced or ended entirely.

With one of the largest high-seas fishing fleets in the world, the EU is uniquely positioned to dramatically reduce the impacts of deep-sea fishing on fragile marine ecosystems, some of which have taken centuries to grow.

Pew’s paper suggests some key policy reforms which include:

  • Phasing out the use of destructive bottom fishing practices and gear;
  • Requiring impact assessments that are to be performed prior to deep-sea fishing;
  • Implementing area closures where significant adverse impacts on vulnerable marine ecosystems are known or are likely to occur; and
  • Reducing bycatch of deep-sea species and ending discarding.

The EU has an opportunity to take on a leadership role in deep-sea conservation and adopt robust changes to the management of its deep sea bottom fishing fleet.  Until it does so, some of the world’s most unique marine life will remain under siege. We believe these species are worth saving and are confident the EU public agrees.

Learn more about Deep-Sea Fishing in the Northeast Atlantic.

 

Related News and Resources

  • Do We Know Enough to Ensure Safe Arctic Drilling?

    • Opinion
    • May 15, 2012

    (New Scientist) For the oil and gas industry, the Arctic Ocean is the final frontier. Beneath the ocean floor lies an estimated 90 billion barrels of recoverable oil - about 13 per cent of the global total. As the sea ice retreats and traditional sources of hydrocarbons dwindle, the pressure to drill is becoming irresistible.

    More

  • National Journal Profiles Marilyn Heiman, U.S. Arctic Program Director

    • Media Coverage
    • May 11, 2012

    For Marilyn Heiman, director of the U.S. Arctic Program for the Pew Environment Group, there is life before the Exxon Valdez and life after the Exxon Valdez.

    More

  • Winton in Search of Sanctuary

    • Media Coverage
    • May 10, 2012
    (The Age) From the windswept West Australian coast, the best-selling author Tim Winton landed in landlocked Canberra yesterday to fight for the oceans.

    More

  • The Latest: The Shark Attack That Changed My Life

    • Other Resource
    • May 10, 2012

    Read The Latest, Pew Environment Group's newsletter. Learn one woman's story about the shark attack that changed her life, veterans advocating for public lands protection, and a movement to create the first generation of great marine parks.

    More

  • Winton Urges Push Towards Sustainable Fishing

    • Media Coverage
    • May 09, 2012
    (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) Award-winning author Tim Winton is urging the Federal Government to push ahead with plans for a new national network of marine parks.

    More

  • Author Tim Winton Pushes for Marine Parks

    • Media Coverage
    • May 09, 2012
    (Sydney Morning Herald) Author Tim Winton has been in Canberra urging the federal government to make good on an election promise to establish a network of marine parks.

    More

  • Creating the First Generation of Great Marine Parks

    • Media Coverage
    • May 08, 2012

    There is no single remedy for our ocean's problems, but one powerful tool we have is marine reserves – special places in which no fishing or other extractive activity is allowed. Reserves help protect marine habitat and the life that depends on it: they increase fish production, provide a laboratory for science and education, and help to promote tourism.

    More

  • Protect Funding for America's Oceans

    • Action Alert
    • May 03, 2012
    On May 8 an amendment was introduced in the House of Representatives that would block funding for the Obama administration’s National Ocean Policy. Such an amendment would seriously hamper conservation and management of marine resources and wildlife.

    More

  • The Legacy Navigator: The Latest from Pew's Global Ocean Legacy Project

    • Other Resource
    • May 03, 2012

    Check out the inaugural edition of the Legacy Navigator, a newsletter featuring the latest from the Pew Environment Group's Global Ocean Legacy program.

    More

  • Safeguarding the Arctic a Must

    • Opinion
    • May 01, 2012

    Marilyn Heiman responds to Michael Bromwich's blog What More Can Be Done to Ensure Safe Offshore Drilling? on NationalJournal.com.

    More

  • Videos: U.S. Arctic Program

    • Other Resource
    • May 01, 2012

    These videos and reports give you an insight into the people and issues that Pew’s U.S. Arctic Program works with every day.

    More

  • Congress Must Help Restore Coastal Communities

    • Opinion
    • Apr 30, 2012
    It seems as if there are few issues that can weather the current political storms to bring together a large bipartisan consensus in Congress. Yet, the U.S. Senate overwhelmingly passed a transportation and infrastructure authorization bill by a bipartisan vote of 74-22. Included in the measure were vital provisions to fund environmental restoration projectsan ambitious program to support conservation projects in coastal communities.

    More

  • Australia's Coral Sea: Recognizing its Past, Protecting its Future

    • Other Resource
    • Apr 30, 2012

    In May 1942, a pivotal naval battle took place in Australia’s Coral Sea, located east of the world-renowned Great Barrier Reef Marine Park. Known as the Battle of the Coral Sea, this engagement turned the tide of World War II in the Pacific. Seventy years later, the Battle of the Coral Sea continues to hold great historical significance for Australia and the United States.

    More

  • International Conservation Group Says Strong Support for Pitcairn Islands Marine Reserve

    • Media Coverage
    • Apr 30, 2012

    (Radio New Zealand International) The international conservation organisation, Pew Environment Group, says it has strong support from the Pitcairn Island community to establish a large, iconic, world class marine reserve.

    More

  • Pitcairn Islands Community Believe Marine Reserve Could Boost Tourism

    • Media Coverage
    • Apr 29, 2012

    (Radio New Zealand International) Residents of Pitcairn Island believe the establishment of what could be the world’s largest marine reserve in their waters could boost ecotourism.

    More

See more...

X
Sign In

Member Sign In

Forgot Password?
Submit Not a Member? Join!
X

Forgot Password?

Send Password Not a Member? Join!
X

Change Password

X
(All Fields are required)
Send Message
Share this on: