Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2004-02-10-Speech-2-131"
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"en.20040210.5.2-131"2
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"The Lage report rightly emphasises that the management measures adopted by the European Union are too often based upon faulty and unreliable scientific diagnoses. The socio-economic consequences of management measures adopted on such a flimsy basis are considerable: it is the very survival of entire fisheries and, indeed, entire industries that is at stake. The scientific effort must therefore be increased and relate both to the biology of marine environments and to the selection of fishing gear, as well as to the socio-economic consequences of the measures for managing the resource. The current imbalance in the CFP, which does not take overall account of the joint objectives of conserving the resource and ensuring the continuity of fisheries, must definitely be corrected.
To this end, the future Regional Advisory Councils will have to play an absolutely key role in formulating requests for scientific advice. They will have to request a range of management options, accompanied by estimates of their biological and socio-economic consequences. Such a development should permit an approach that is no longer brutal and irreversible but gradual, progressive, flexible and continuously adaptable. I am pleased that it has been possible to adopt the amendments I had tabled along those lines."@en1
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