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Government urged to save Plymouth fishing industry after Brexit 'betrayal'

City council wants financial support for another year as it hears woes of fishermen, merchants processors and consultants

Plymouth's fishing port

Plymouth City Council’s leader says the city’s fishing industry has been “betrayed” by the Brexit deal and is to ask the Government for more financial support.

The came from a special scrutiny committee approved by the council’s Labour Cabinet.

Leader Tudor Evans, Labour, said the post-Brexit Trade and Cooperation Agreement had “betrayed” the fishing industry, .

The committee investigated the impact on the industry of leaving the European Union customs union and single market on January 1, 2021.

Tudor Evans, Plymouth City Council leader

Fishers, merchants, processors and consultants told a hearing in February that Brexit and the Covid pandemic had caused the “perfect storm” and had fallen short of promises to take back control of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ waters.

Fishermen said that the post-Brexit trade deal had failed to deliver the increased catch they were hoping for, and still allowed EU boats access to º£½ÇÊÓÆµ waters between six and 12 miles off-shore. Processors said extra costs and paperwork were hitting exports to the EU which account for four-fifths of trade.

Recommendations from the committee approved by the council’s Cabinet set out a series of measures to support local fishing communities and businesses.

They included asking the Government to continue to seek a “fairer share” of the western channel quota of cod, haddock and sole, which are important to the West Country fleet.