Tuesday, 26 June 2012

South Dublin Seabird Outings

The South Dublin Branch of BirdWatch Ireland will be hosting a series of seabird events at Dalkey every Tuesday evening in July. These events are free of charge & all are welcome to attend.

Dates: Tuesdays 3rd, 10th, 17th, 24th & 31st July.
Time: 18:30pm to 20:00pm
Location: Coliemore Harbour, Dalkey, Co. Dublin.
Details: Dalkey seabird viewing evenings with BirdWatch Ireland experts on hand to show visitors the breeding terns & other species of seabird such as auks, gulls & shearwaters. No walking required. These events are in conjunction with Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council.

A pdf copy of the Dalkey Tern Project leaflet can be found on the DLRCoCo. website by following this link.


Arctic Tern © Anthony McGeehan

Sunday, 17 June 2012

Feeble beginning to Common Fisheries Policy reform not likely to help fish, fishermen or marine wildlife

The regrettable failure of EU fisheries ministers to adopt a more radical reform of the Common Fisheries Policy will not end overfishing but may scupper chances of achieving sustainable fisheries for the people and wildlife that depend on them, according to BirdWatch Ireland.


Representatives of OCEAN2012 outside the
EU Parliament at the launch of European Fish Weeks


BirdWatch Ireland, Ireland’s largest environmental NGO, was extremely disappointed by the outcome of the EU Fisheries Council meeting in Luxembourg on Wednesday (June 13th).  Instead of adopting more positive measures to end overfishing by 2015, the Council decided to be less ambitious and agree in principle to ending overfishing, but perhaps not until 2020.  The general approach includes a delay of a proposed discard ban, with one date given for target species and another for discard species, a delay in ending overfishing and a delay in adhering to scientific advice on maximum exploitation rates of already diminishing stocks.

Dr. SinĂ©ad Cummins of BirdWatch Ireland’s Conservation Team said, "Numerous scientific and marine experts have flagged the problems of overfishing at current rates, concluding that by 2048 there will be no more fish to catch in most of the world’s oceans."  She added that, "Fisheries must be regulated properly so that fish are not caught at a faster rate than they can reproduce and so that fishing techniques do not cause significant harm to marine ecosystems."

Alan Lauder, Chief Executive of BirdWatch Ireland, commented, "EU fisheries ministers have so far failed to show courage and break with existing failed policies.  Instead, they have chosen to continue their record of mismanagement by delaying the end of overfishing in the EU, guaranteeing yet further harm both to ecosystems and to those people who depend on sustainable, viable fisheries for their livelihoods."

BirdWatch Ireland, along with the 166 strong European membership of OCEAN2012, is now looking to the European Parliament (and to the Plenary Vote by MEP’s in November) to support a Common Fisheries Policy reform that delivers a healthy marine environment and viable fishery-dependent communities.