Moreover the proposal stated that Member States may limit the period of validity of Transferable Fishing Concessions to a period of at least 15 years,
for the purpose of reallocating such concessions. Indeed, given the diversity of fisheries in Europe, Member States should be allowed to choose the management system which is most appropriate for selleck products the specific characteristics and requirements of the regional fisheries, based on a set of transparent criteria for economically viable, and environmentally and socially sustainable practices. During the following two years, the original EC Proposal has been extensively discussed and revised at all governance and stakeholder levels, until DAPT clinical trial in January 2013, the Committee of Fisheries of the European Parliament has finally released the Report on the proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the Common Fisheries Policy, where it was stated that “Member States will remain free to establish – or not to establish – a system of Transferable Fishing Concessions” [21]. Therefore a facultative application of TFCs was decided for the fisheries management system of each country.
In the last decades, a number of European countries, both Member States and Third Countries [22], have developed fisheries management systems based on transferable concessions/quotas and similar rights-based systems. Such systems have been mainly applied in Northern European maritime areas, where fishery is usually characterized by simpler patterns than in Southern/Mediterranean areas.
Experiences in Europe are: Netherlands [23] and [24], United Kingdom Tenoxicam [25], Denmark [26], Spain [27] and [28], Estonia [29] and [30], Norway [31] and Iceland [32] and [33]. Overall, such systems have proved to be positive in improving management efficiency. However, at present, there is not a clear view on the effects caused by the application of this management systems both in the short and in the long term, and controversial results have been achieved in many cases [34] and [35]. In Mediterranean countries, fisheries management is mainly based on effort control and some other technical measures (e.g. minimum landing size and mesh size) and no TACs (Total Allowable Catches) are implemented, except for bluefin tuna [36]. Moreover, only Territorial Use Rights, have been introduced with success, in Adriatic clam fisheries [15] and [37]. Following the experiences reported in some EU countries and the considerations made for the Mediterranean, the present study, carried out in the framework of the EU Project MA.RE.MED.