Post by account_disabled on Mar 6, 2024 8:32:30 GMT
The 21 fishing vessels, from Andalusia and the Canary Islands, and their professionals who fished in Moroccan waters and who can no longer do so due to the end of the current protocol, can apply starting tomorrow for financial aid that the Government intends to accelerate. The objective is to cover the economic impact of this stoppage of activity. Specifically, the Executive has opened two lines of up to 302,000 euros, one of 120,000 euros will be allocated to shipowners and another of 182,000 to crew members, co-financed at 50% between the European Commission and the Government through the “temporary stop” concept. from the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF) This formula is the fastest to speed up the receipt of aid. The Official State Gazette (BOE) today publishes the call from the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food with the aid directed to the 21 fishing vessels that requested a license in 2021, 2022 and 2023 to fish in Moroccan waters.
These, only eleven carried out their activity for at least 20 days in the three-year period 2021 to 2023 (the next vessel below this amount has only fished 3 days). These eleven ships, seven from the Canary Islands and Job Function Email Database four from Andalusia, also meet the requirement set by the European Commission of not having received more than 180 days of aid for temporary stops in the FEMP period, in 2014 and 2023). read also Sunday Marchena Because the stoppage of fishing activity affects vessels from more than one autonomous community, Andalusia and the Canary Islands, the General Secretariat of Fisheries will be in charge of managing aid to shipowners. In the case of crew members, management will be the responsibility of the Social Institute of the Navy. For the rest of the ships, ten, the Government assures that it will study state aid to compensate for the stoppage of their activity. Among them are six Andalusians who have fished for more than 20 days between 2021 and 2023, but who have already received the stop aid limit of 180 days, charged to European funds.
The Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Luis Planas, stated this Monday that "it will be a slower path, that of State aid, than that of the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund, but in any case, they will be covered." Activity stoppage in Morocco The renewal of the fishing protocol is pending a ruling from the CJEU The renewal of the fishing protocol with the Kingdom of Morocco, which expired today, is pending a ruling by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). The deadline for submitting applications is 15 business days starting tomorrow, the day following the publication of the orders in the BOE. Minister Planas wanted to take advantage of the announcement of the call for aid to ensure that "this weekend the PP, in line with its usual hypocrisy, is getting into trouble in this regard." “Remember that the longest period in which a protocol has not been in force and fishing has not been possible in the Moroccan fishing grounds was between 1999 and 2004, with the Popular Party government.
These, only eleven carried out their activity for at least 20 days in the three-year period 2021 to 2023 (the next vessel below this amount has only fished 3 days). These eleven ships, seven from the Canary Islands and Job Function Email Database four from Andalusia, also meet the requirement set by the European Commission of not having received more than 180 days of aid for temporary stops in the FEMP period, in 2014 and 2023). read also Sunday Marchena Because the stoppage of fishing activity affects vessels from more than one autonomous community, Andalusia and the Canary Islands, the General Secretariat of Fisheries will be in charge of managing aid to shipowners. In the case of crew members, management will be the responsibility of the Social Institute of the Navy. For the rest of the ships, ten, the Government assures that it will study state aid to compensate for the stoppage of their activity. Among them are six Andalusians who have fished for more than 20 days between 2021 and 2023, but who have already received the stop aid limit of 180 days, charged to European funds.
The Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Luis Planas, stated this Monday that "it will be a slower path, that of State aid, than that of the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund, but in any case, they will be covered." Activity stoppage in Morocco The renewal of the fishing protocol is pending a ruling from the CJEU The renewal of the fishing protocol with the Kingdom of Morocco, which expired today, is pending a ruling by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). The deadline for submitting applications is 15 business days starting tomorrow, the day following the publication of the orders in the BOE. Minister Planas wanted to take advantage of the announcement of the call for aid to ensure that "this weekend the PP, in line with its usual hypocrisy, is getting into trouble in this regard." “Remember that the longest period in which a protocol has not been in force and fishing has not been possible in the Moroccan fishing grounds was between 1999 and 2004, with the Popular Party government.