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Not so green after all? The EU's role in international fisheries management: the cases of NAFO and ICCAT

Author
Belschner T
Journal/Series
Journal of European Public Policy | vol 22 (7); p. 985 - 1003
Date
2015
Source
IUCN (ID: ANA-091044)
Publisher | Place of publication
Taylor & Francis Group Ltd | Abingdon, U.K.
ISSN
1350-1763
Document type
Article in periodical
Language
English
Country/Territory
European Union
Subject
Fisheries
Keyword
Precautionary principle Governance Fishery management and conservation
Abstract

The European Union (EU) is usually described as a promoter of global environmental governance, committed to sustainability and the precautionary principle. Regarding international fisheries management, however, the EU has repeatedly deviated from these principles. This article analyses the EU's policy in two Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs): the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO) and the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT). The EU's deviation from its environmental principles is explained by the weakness of the pro-environmental advocacy coalition in the EU's fisheries policy subsystem and the overcapacity of the EU's fleet, which first arose when European fishing nations were excluded from traditional fishing grounds during the creation of Exclusive Economic Zones in the 1970s. At the same time the article finds evidence of a trend towards sustainability and precaution in the EU's external fisheries policy since the mid-2000s.