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Mackerel

Further information


How are fisheries quotas set?

In December each year the EU Council of Fisheries Ministers sets "Total Allowable Catches" (TACs) for over 130 fish stocks. In setting these TACs account is taken of various factors, including the latest scientific advice on the condition of the stocks.

Each year the UK and other EU Member States receive a fixed percentage share of these TACs, based on historic fishing activity: this is known as the principle of "relative stability" between Member States.

The UK’s quota is then shared out among some 19 producer organisations, the inshore fleet (under 10 metre vessels) and vessels not in membership of a producer organisation (the non sector) based on the "fixed quota allocation units" (FQA) held by the individual vessels in membership of each group, or by a group collectively.

These FQA units were themselves based on vessels' historic landings during a fixed reference period (1994 – 1996 for most stocks). Each group's share of the total UK quota for a particular stock is based principally on that group's share of the total FQA units for that stock which are held by the UK fleet as a whole.

It is the responsibility of each producer organisation to manage their quotas and to ensure that they do not overshoot their allocations. Groups do however have the facility to swap quota with other groups within the UK or, through Fisheries Administrations, to swap quota with other Member States.

Groups' landings of quota stocks are monitored weekly by Fisheries Administrations, with uptake spreadsheets normally being produced every Thursday.

 

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Marine and Fisheries Agency