Recognising and Protecting the National Benefit of Sustainable Fisheries in the UK

Coulthard, Sarah, Hatt, Ainsley, Lewis, Phoebe, Stewart, Bryce D, Roach, Michael, Clark, Robert, Fanshawe, Sam, Sandrine, Carole, Urquhart, Julie ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5000-4630, Percy, Jerry and Gray, Tim (2025) Recognising and Protecting the National Benefit of Sustainable Fisheries in the UK. Fish and Fisheries. doi:10.1111/faf.12898 (In Press)

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14966 Coulthard, Hatt, Lewis, Stewart, Roach, Clark, Fanshawe, Sandrine, Urquhart, Percy, Gray (2025) Recognising and Protecting the National Benefit of Sustainable Fisheries in the UK.pdf - Published Version
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Abstract

Sustainable commercial fishing makes valuable contributions to coastal regions and broader national benefits. This paper offers three arguments in relation to what is required for the societal benefits of sustainable fisheries to be fully realised and considers each in the context of the UK but with global relevance. First, there is a need to raise the profile of the full range of benefits that are delivered through sustainable fisheries to coastal communities and the broader public. In the UK, the delivery of a ‘national benefit’ objective through fisheries is now enshrined in law by the Fisheries Act, 2020; we operationalise this through a new framing that distils eight ‘national benefits’ that all sustainable fisheries should deliver. Second, better acknowledgement of what society gains from sustainable fisheries must be paralleled with recognition of what society is simultaneously at risk of losing through the decline of the fishing fleet. We detail this decline in a new analysis of long-term UK data, which highlights that the decline is unequally felt, with some regions of the UK, and small-scale fishing sectors, experiencing loss more acutely. This reality leads us to argue a third point, that if society is to retain and truly harness the benefits that flow from sustainable fisheries, governing bodies must act quickly to ensure that fisheries are environmentally sustainable, diverse and inclusive, pursuing fisheries that ‘leave no one behind’.

Item Type: Article
Article Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Sustainable fishing; National benefits; UK fisheries; Fisheries governance; Societal benefits
Subjects: H Social Sciences > H Social Sciences (General)
S Agriculture > SH Aquaculture. Fisheries. Angling
Divisions: Schools and Research Institutes > Countryside and Community Research Institute
Depositing User: Caitlin Mackenzie
Date Deposited: 11 Apr 2025 10:38
Last Modified: 19 Apr 2025 09:15
URI: https://eprints.glos.ac.uk/id/eprint/14966

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