Ministers across 
 
the European Union 
 
convening 
 
on Tuesday, March 1 
 
called for the first-ever 
 
reform in 40 years of 
 
a fisheries policy that has 
 
resulted in an estimated 
 
1 million tons of fish 
 
caught in the North Sea 
 
alone being thrown back 
 
into the sea each year. 
 
This is due to 
 
an imposed quota system, 
 
which was originally 
 
specified by 
 
the European Union 
 
to protect the fish stock. 
 
However, in part due to 
 
fishing methods where 
 
giant nets are dragged 
 
across the ocean floor, 
 
capturing all marine life 
 
they encounter, 
 
up to two-thirds of the 
 
fish caught in some areas 
 
are now being discarded, 
 
most of them 
 
already perished. 
 
 
In addition, 
 
unintentionally caught 
 
species which do not 
 
have quota regulations 
 
must also be discarded. 
 
In discussing with 
 
delegates from European 
 
Union member states, 
 
Fisheries Commissioner 
 
Maria Damanaki said 
 
she hopes to introduce 
 
a discard ban by 2013. 
 
Meanwhile, 
 
more than 650,000 
 
signatures have been 
 
gathered by advocates 
 
in the United Kingdom 
 
hoping to 
 
stop the practice. 
 
Thank you 
 
Commissioner Damanaki,
 
European Union 
 
ministers and all advocates 
 
for your efforts to save 
 
precious marine lives. 
 
May the day soon come 
 
when our friends 
 
of the sea can roam 
 
the ocean waters freely 
 
and safely as we cherish 
 
their existence 
 
as we would our own. 
 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
 
has often addressed 
 
the devastating 
 
consequences 
 
of fishing practices, 
 
as during a May 2009 
 
videoconference in Togo.
 
Supreme Master Ching Hai : The way we are going now, 
 
we are literally emptying 
 
the oceans of certain fish, 
 
plus tons of other fish 
 
caught along with them 
 
by accident, the by-catch 
 
that are just thrown away. 
 
So, if those fish are 
 
all gone, we will see 
 
a catastrophic loss 
 
of other marine species 
 
as well. 
 
The ocean is a miracle. 
 
But if we ruin 
 
the ecosystems 
 
through overfishing, this 
 
will spell disaster for us. 
 
So, speaking for 
 
the environment, 
 
fishing for food is not 
 
the answer at all.
No animal products at all; 
 
that is the best way. 
 
We should be vegan. 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/mar/01/eu-ban-fish-discards 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/mar/01/government-attacks-eu-fishing-ruleshttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12598660
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7635668.stm