The next item is the inquiry into the reform of the common fisheries policy and a review of the written evidence that has been received. A substantial body of opinion has been presented to us and I thank those organisations that have taken the time to give us detailed contributions. Given that events took place over the holiday period, I recognise the effort that has been made.
I agree 100 per cent that it is important that in the inquiry we keep a tight focus and adhere rigidly to our remit.
I thought that it would be beneficial to the committee to provide members with an update. I am conscious that some of the evidence has reached you only in the past few days and that you may not have been able to consider it all in detail. The clerks and legal adviser will try to provide a summary of all the evidence that we have received.
Thank you, Stephen. That is extremely useful.
I have not read every submission, but I have read a number of them. A common thread of concern among fishermen is that UK enforcement of regulations seems to be far stricter than that of other countries. That relates not only to overfishing, but to the application of guidelines and regulations.
The Commission has already said that it is keen to give oral evidence, so we could take that opportunity to ask about those issues. If we do, we should highlight them in advance, so that the witnesses are prepared for our questions. I ask the clerks to note that and to find out when the Commission might be available.
I am glad to hear that the Commission is prepared to provide oral evidence, but why did it decline to provide written evidence?
I have received a letter outlining the reasons. I believe that the Commission does not want to provide written material while it is still finalising plans for the green paper. However, the letter indicated that the Commission would be more than happy to discuss whether officials could come to the committee. I shall provide copies of that letter to members.
I just wondered whether there was a problem of recognition, but there seems not to be.
There are two separate issues. When the witnesses come before the committee, we have an opportunity to ask them to provide the evidence and information. That would be a useful line of questioning. We can make contact with other areas of Europe and I will speak to the clerk to see what we can usefully obtain quickly. However, I would want to avoid a protracted inquiry that seeks to do the work of other well-resourced institutions. We are a small committee with limited resources. We must stick to our remit. However, some of the general background information that Lloyd Quinan referred to might be useful.
Do we know whether the criteria on fish handling and so on that are applied in Europe are universal? Do we know that the criteria that determine how the fishery protection fleets or the navy work are consistent? Is there a uniform set of standards to which all fishery enforcement and protection agencies must work or are there differences between countries? It might be worth knowing that before we take evidence.
We will see what information we can get on that.
I want to follow up Lloyd Quinan's point. I agree that we should not be parochial about the issue. I am not saying that UK enforcement of regulations is different, but that is a common allegation. We should investigate that matter. That is something in which the committee could play an important role. We could find out what is happening and either nail it on the head or clarify the situation.
I agree with Irene Oldfather about trying to measure the extent of the problem. Some years ago, I read an EU information document that set out information about different member states and compared the extent to which each member state polices the fishery zones within its territory. It was interesting to note that at that time—about three years ago—the UK had a high level of policing. However, things may have changed. It would be interesting to know whether that is subject to monitoring and whether a similar, more current, document exists. That would be useful information, in addition to the oral evidence.
The timetable is very focused and our primary aim must be to establish what is the best deal we can get for Scotland in terms of common fisheries policy reform. If we were to go off at a tangent and take too much time considering Spanish and Danish interests, and even some of the enforcement issues, we might not achieve that. We are looking to prepare a position to help influence negotiation in March and beyond. Perhaps an adviser to the committee or an appointed expert would be able to go out and seek that information and evidence for us. That would allow the committee to stay focused. A meeting every fortnight between now and March does not give us much time.
Perhaps members could leave the question of an adviser and how to seek information from other areas to me. I will discuss that with the clerk and ensure that we do not lose sight of it. We will come back to the committee with information and proposals.
The paper that Stephen Imrie has prepared clearly summarises the main areas that we should cover in our inquiry. I take the point about our resources being rather limited, but perhaps we should think about getting an adviser. I do not know whether that would be hugely expensive, but I am sure that it would be helpful. In any event, with or without an expert adviser, we should ensure that we get expert witnesses to come before the committee and put on record their views.
As I said to Ben Wallace, I will come back to the committee on that.
Irrespective of what happens with the conservation procedure, we know that jobs will be lost. Is it within our remit to consider support and training for people who are likely to lose their jobs? The Scottish Executive rural affairs department is examining that already. Would we be able to examine the Executive's position on the decommissioning and laying-up of the fleet and on whether it will operate a compensation scheme?
We need to be careful. We are trying to examine European policy to ensure that Scotland and its industry get the best deal from that policy. We might want to comment on the ramifications of the application of that policy, but it would not be for this committee to think about how it impacts on communities. We might want to ask Highlands and Islands Enterprise for its comments on the job implications of European policy and for suggestions about what Europe should or should not be doing. There are issues to do with the application of structural funds that are also—
On the question of compensation—
I will come to that.
It would be administered by the EU, would it not?
Yes. We could consider compensation within our remit, but we would want to avoid doing what the Rural Development Committee or the Enterprise and Lifelong Learning Committee should be doing. All sorts of trails could flow from the issue and we need to stay focused. We need Highlands and Islands Enterprise to address some issues, such as the application of structural funds, so we can ask about other issues at the same time.
I agree with your earlier comments about the people from whom we should seek evidence, such as the fishing organisations, academia, SNH, the Executive, the European Commission and environmental bodies, but a considerable number of fishing organisations have already submitted written evidence. I am not sure about the relative size of the organisations or about who and what they represent. Perhaps we should seek advice on that, if we have not already done so. If we talk to one association and not another, we might lay ourselves open to charges of not hearing all the evidence or of showing favouritism.
A number of the associations are members of an umbrella organisation but have different perspectives. I take the point that you make and assure you that we will take further advice.
If we took evidence from Highlands and Islands Enterprise, would we get a different perspective from other enterprise companies, such as Scottish Enterprise Grampian, on north-east fishing interests? The funding regime for those organisations differs, and it might be interesting to get a different perspective.
We will take advice on that. Highlands and Islands Enterprise has a specific issue concerning European funding and what might or might not be done. Nevertheless, we can also ask Grampian about the ramifications of such funding for local communities.
If we invited Scottish Enterprise Grampian, I presume that Ann Bell would come, as she is already linked into the North Sea Commission's specialist fisheries group. If local government in Scotland was linked into the North Sea Commission, which embraces other countries across the North sea, we might be in a better position to get some comparative information from some of our colleagues in Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Germany and Belgium, for example. They might be able to give us some pointers in the specialist fisheries group. Has that idea featured in the discussions that the clerks have had with Scottish Enterprise Grampian—in the thinking about who might be invited, who could give that helicopter-down, comparative view of the policy that is being shaped across the North sea area?
We have contacted the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities but have not received a response. I hope that your points will be addressed in COSLA's response. We might seek written evidence from the local enterprise companies first, after which we can determine how to proceed.
Following up Dennis Canavan's point, I would be happy for you and the clerks to consider the evidence and determine which organisations differ in their views on the fishing industry. There is much agreement in the submissions, and we do not want to hear the same evidence four or five times. On the basis of the written evidence, you could whittle down the number of fishing industry organisations that we would ask to give oral evidence.
We will write to the CPMR for information. The Scottish Parliament information centre also has expertise in the fishing industry; the clerks will liaise with its researchers. We have tried to focus on organisations with slightly different views that need to be represented, and we will reconsider the matter carefully before we finalise the witness list.
PESCA was the scheme whereby European money was given to ports and harbours. It is worth asking whether the Scottish Executive thinks that scheme was successful and whether the aid schemes that were in place achieved what they were supposed to achieve so that, when we talk about reform we can know whether whatever package is put together is the same as the old model that the Government felt did or did not work.
The Community initiative—known as PESCA—was indeed one of the European funding packages for those aspects. I would be pleased if the committee agreed to return to some of the bodies that administered that fund, to ask them about their experience.
Are there any further comments? If not, does the committee agree to invite witnesses for the meeting on 30 January?
I shall liaise with the clerks in drawing up the witness list for that meeting.
Meeting continued in private until 16:00.
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