skip to main content
European Commission Logo
en English
Newsroom

A new partnership starts between the EU and the Cook Islands

Rarotonga, 30/11/2016 - The EU and the Cook Islands have agreed on all the elements of their brand-new Sustainable Fisheries Partnership Agreement, giving the go ahead to fishing operations for EU vessels.

date:  02/12/2016

On 29 November, the first Joint Committee in the framework of the Sustainable Fisheries Partnership Agreement between the EU and the Cook Islands came to a successful end. The parties defined the financial support to be granted by the EU for the development of the Cook Islands’ fisheries sector and discussed fisheries matters to allow for the start of fishing operations.

The new Agreement will allow up to four Union vessels to fish for max 7 000 tonnes of tunas per year and other highly migratory species in the Cook Islands’ fishing area. In return, the EU will pay the Cook Islands 2.87 million euros, 1.47 million of which are in exchange for access to the resources, while the rest is specifically earmarked for the local fishing sector. Over the next four years the Cook Islands will be able to invest these 1.4 million euros on improving the living standard of small-scale fishermen, reinforcing control and surveillance operations, strengthening the food safety authority and sharpening the sustainability of their fisheries policies.

The Joint Committee also reviewed the procedures for issuing fishing authorisations and catch reporting, as well as the boundaries of the fishing area accessible to Union vessels. In addition to the monitoring, control and surveillance measures prescribed by the fisheries agreement and the competent regional fisheries management organisation, Union vessels will implement an electronic observer scheme on board on a voluntary basis.

In the margins of the Joint Committee, the Cook Islands’ fisheries administration held a public hearing in which EU officials presented principles and content of the fisheries agreement and of our Common Fisheries Policy to the public at large.

The new Sustainable Fisheries Partnership Agreement between the EU and the Cook Islands is a completely new partnership. It is an opportunity for both parties to strengthen their cooperation at multilateral level (within the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission or WCPFC) and, being our only active Agreement in the Pacific Ocean, it strengthens the position of the EU in the region.