Seventeen key decisions, including 12 binding recommendations, that will enhance the sustainability of fisheries and aquaculture in the Mediterranean and Black Sea regions were adopted during the 47th session of the General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM) of the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), held in Rome, Italy.

GFCM

GFCM

GFCM members include 23 contracting parties (Albania, Algeria, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Egypt, European Union, France, Greece, Israel, Italy, Lebanon, Libya, Malta, Monaco, Montenegro, Morocco, Romania, Slovenia, Spain, Syria, Tunisia and Turkey ) and six cooperating non-contracting parties (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Jordan, Moldova, Saudi Arabia and Ukraine)

“This annual session concluded a year of intense, collaborative efforts and demonstrated the continued commitment of GFCM members to address the ever-increasing challenges facing the fisheries and aquaculture sector in our region,” said Miguel Bernal, GFCM Executive Secretary.

According to the RFMO, the percentage of stocks experiencing overfishing in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea has dropped to its lowest level in a decade – less than 60% – but fishing pressure is still at twice the level considered sustainable. This is highlighted in the GFCM flagship publication The State of Mediterranean and Black Sea Fisheries 2023

New decisions adopted at the meeting included the reinforcement of measures addressing the management of numerous GFCM priority species, including European eel, red coral, blackspot seabream, European hake, Norway lobster, European sprat, turbot, rapa whelk, piked dogfish and sturgeons.

In the Adriatic Sea, the finalisation of a rigorous management strategy evaluation process supported a landmark decision to establish single species harvest control rules and annual catch limits for sardine and European anchovy, moving away from the joint catch limits enforced until now and promoting ecological sustainability and economic stability.

Meanwhile, in the Black Sea, a small increase in catch limits was adopted for turbot – a key species which has seen a threefold decrease in fishing mortality and a threefold increase in biomass and is now approaching sustainability as a result of the adoption of a multiannual management plan in 2017. This decision aims to incentivise fishers and deter illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing, while enhancing data collection on fishing effort and discards, and identifying further technical measures to mitigate by-catch.

Spatial management was also in the spotlight, as countries agreed to create a fisheries restricted area (FRA) in the Otranto Channel in the Adriatic Sea. This decision establishes a core area where bottom trawling activities are banned in order to protect vulnerable marine ecosystems formed by bamboo coral and enhance the productivity of marine living resources through the protection of essential fish habitats, such as those of deep-water red shrimps. It also delineates a buffer area, where fishing activities are regulated.

This is the eleventh FRA established by the GFCM and will be comparable in size with the country of Luxembourg.

Aquaculture was another crucial component of the discussions, with countries recognising the progress made towards enhancing the sustainable development of the sector, as well as the numerous assistance programmes established across the region in the past year.

To address the fact that climate change triggers emerging diseases that threaten the sector’s productivity and growth, countries agreed to set up a network for monitoring aquaculture diseases and minimising risks associated with trade.

Principles for responsible investment in aquaculture were also adopted, aimed at enhancing the sector’s attractiveness to investors and highlighting its role in food security.

GFCM also noted that important advances have taken place in recent years, with many countries updating their national laws to specifically target IUU fishing. As a result of these efforts, Albania, Algeria, the European Union and its Member States, Egypt, Montenegro, Morocco and Turkey received GFCM compliance awards during the annual session for integrating GFCM decisions into their legal frameworks and for accurate data reporting.

With last year marking the launch of a new phase towards a more modern framework which allows for closer monitoring of countries’ compliance with GFCM decisions. The session discussed how to provide countries and the GFCM with the necessary means to advance rapidly on this issue. Countries highlighted that it is essential to enhance compliance assessments and advance the operationalisation of monitoring, control and surveillance tools, such as inspection schemes and sightings.

“Looking forward, I am confident we can raise the bar and together meet the challenges before us. I would also like to recognize and congratulate those who collectively contribute to our efforts, from experts and administrators to fishers and farmers, for their strides and commitment to our ever-growing work, as the ultimate beneficiaries of our decisions,” said Fouad Guenatri, Head of Studies and Synthesis, Ministry of Fisheries and Fisheries Production, Algeria.