More than 200 top chefs across Europe have pledged to stop sourcing seafood obtained by electric pulse fishing. |
More than
200 top chefs across Europe have pledged to stop sourcing seafood obtained by
electric pulse fishing, days before an EU vote that could expand the use of the
controversial technique, an ocean advocacy group said Thursday.
"We
refuse to work with seafood coming from a fishing method that condemns our
future and that of the ocean," said the text written by Christopher
Coutanceau, whose restaurant on the Atlantic coast in La Rochelle, western
France, has earned two Michelin stars.
The
practice involves dragging electrically charged lines just above the seafloor
that shock marine life up from low-lying positions into trawling nets.
EU rules
allow member states to equip up to five percent of their fleets with
electrodes, and the method has been adopted in particular by Dutch vessels
fishing for sole.
On Tuesday,
the EU is to vote on the practice, which critics say harms too many fish that
are left on the seabed, as well as those that are harvested.
"Electric
trawlers produce catches of poor quality, fish which underwent stress and are
often marked by post-electrocution bruises," according to the text
released by Bloom, a French NGO.
"It is
impossible to work with such low-quality products."
The
signatories included French chefs Helene Darroze, Yannick Alleno and Olivier
Roellinger, who has longed worked to improve sustainability in the fishing
industry.
Spanish
chefs Elena Arzak and Quique Dacosta, Italy's Antonino Cannavacciuolo and
Alfonso and Ernesto Iaccarino, and Thomas Buehner and Heinz Winkler of Germany
also signed the text.
On
Wednesday, several members of the European parliament asked for a delay to next
week's vote on electric pulse fishing, in order to allow time for an
"informed debate".
For Jerry
Percy of the Low-Impact Fishers of Europe (LIFE), which claims to represent
about 80 percent of Britain's independent fishermen, a main problem is the lack
of solid data on the long-term consequences of the practice on fishing stocks.
The method
is outlawed in many parts of the world, including China, but proponents say it
is more environmentally friendly and results in lower fuel usage for boats.
Bloom had
already filed in October a case against the Netherlands with the European
Commission, accusing the country of illegally authorising its trawlers to use
the technique.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.