ES slēdz divu veidu zvejniecības nolīgumus ar ārpussavienības valstīm:
EU SFPAs infographic (Available in English, French, Portuguese and Spanish, Published 2015)
EU Sustainable Fisheries Partnership Agreements (Available in English, French, Portuguese and Spanish, Published 2020)
In exchange, the EU pays the partner countries a financial contribution composed of 2 distinct parts:
The EU has currently 8 SFPAs protocols in force with third countries:
The EU has also 7 "dormant" agreements with Gabon, Sao Tomé e Principe, Madagascar, Mozambique, Equatorial Guinea, Micronesia, Solomon Island. "Dormant agreements" stand for countries which adopted a fisheries partnership agreement without having a protocol in force. EU vessels are therefore not allowed to fish in waters under the regime of the dormant agreements. Comoros agreement, which was also dormant, is currently being denounced.
Ziemeļu nolīgumi
ES zvejniecība Ziemeļjūrā un Atlantijas okeāna ziemeļaustrumu daļā ir cieši saistīta ar mūsu kaimiņvalstu — Norvēģijas, Īslandes un Fēru salu — darbībām. Tā kā daudzi zivju bari pārvietojas pāri valstu robežām, visiem četriem iesaistītajiem dalībniekiem vajadzētu koordinēt savas darbības, īpaši tāpēc, ka dažādu valstu zvejas flotes nebūt nav ieinteresētas vienu un to pašu zivju krājumu nozvejā.
Tāpēc daudzus zivju krājumus apsaimnieko kopīgi, apmainoties ar kvotām, lai tās neietu zudumā. Dažus krājumus pārvalda starpvalstu konvencija par turpmāko daudzpusējo sadarbību Ziemeļaustrumatlantijas zvejniecībā, kuru noslēdza, lai apsaimniekotu zivju krājumus šajā reģionā. Citus zivju krājumus pārvalda ar nolīgumiem, kas noslēgti starp piekrastes valstīm.
Šie nolīgumi ir ārkārtīgi svarīgi lielai daļai ES zvejas flotes, īpaši nolīgums ar Norvēģiju, kurā vien ietvertas kvotas vairāk nekā 2 miljardu eiro vērtībā.
The agreement with Iceland is "dormant".
15.11.2020
07.12.2021
€5 300 000
€550 000
The European Economic Community concluded its first bilateral fisheries agreements in the late 1970's. More than 30 other bilateral agreements were concluded until today mainly with developing States in Africa or in the Pacific. The negotiation of fisheries bilateral agreements resulted from the adoption of the UN Convention of the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) which establishes a legal sovereignty for coastal states over living marine resources in maritime zones within 200 nautical miles from their baselines (the "Exclusive Economic Zone"). As a result, the conclusion of bilateral agreements with third countries appeared necessary to give European Union fleets access to fish stock surplus that are not used by the coastal states' local fleets.
The Common Fisheries Policy, especially its external dimension, establishes a legal framework for EU fishing activities outside the European waters.
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Tiesību akti saistībā ar nolīgumiem ar ārpussavienības valstīm (EUR-Lex)
Nelegālā zveja (NNN)
EUMOFA is conducting a brief online survey about its services. The survey will provide a better understanding of the users’ needs and expectations and help to improve EUMOFA services.
On 8 January 2021, the EU and Greenland concluded negotiations for a new Sustainable Fisheries Partnership Agreement (SFPA) and a new Protocol that will strengthen their cooperation in the fisheries sector for the next four years with the possibility of a two-year extension.
The 2020 Annual Economic Report on the EU Fishing Fleet projects that in 2020, the EU fleet remained profitable overall, despite the effects of COVID-19 on the fleet and fish markets. More sustainable fishing and lower fuel costs have helped to mitigate the socio-economic impacts of the pandemic.