login
login
Image header Agence Europe
Europe Daily Bulletin No. 11343
Contents Publication in full By article 13 / 27
SECTORAL POLICIES / (ae) internal market

Parliament/Council agreement on seal-derived products

Brussels, 25/06/2015 (Agence Europe) - EU sales of seal products from hunts hitherto conducted to protect fishing stocks will be banned in the EU in future but the exemption for the trade in products derived from seal hunts carried out by the Inuit community will remain. This is the result of the preliminary deal struck by internal market MEPs and the Latvian Presidency of the Council on Thursday 25 June.

The new article which refers to the need to inform citizens properly that the seal products originating from Inuit and other indigenous communities' hunts are legal, was obtained by Parliament,” said the rapporteur, Cristian-Silviu Busoi (EPP, Romania).

The EU banned the trade in seal products in 2009 in response to animal welfare concerns. However, it allowed two exemptions, one for products derived from seals hunted by Inuit and other indigenous communities and the other for small-scale hunts to ensure the “sustainable management of marine resources” (the so-called MRM exception). Then in June 2014, a World Trade Organisation ruling challenged these exemptions on the grounds that they could have discriminatory effects, thus obliging the EU to update its rules on the trade in seal products (see EUROPE 11086).

MEPs backed a Commission proposal to align the EU rules with the WTO ruling by renouncing the MRM exception and keeping a reinforced Inuit exception, as seal hunting is an integral part of the Inuit community's culture and identity. Inuits will be allowed to sell seal products in the EU only if their hunting methods have due regard to animal welfare, are a part of their tradition and contribute to its subsistence, the deal says. A body recognised by the Commission will issue a compliance document in this regard. However, if the Commission uncovers evidence that Inuit hunts are conducted primarily for commercial purposes it may restrict or prohibit the placing on the market of seal products from these hunts.

The Commission will have to report by the end of 2019 on the implementation of the new rules, paying particular attention to their impact on the Inuit community. (Lionel Changeur)

Contents

EUROPEAN COUNCIL
ECONOMY - FINANCE
EXTERNAL ACTION
SECTORAL POLICIES
EDUCATION
NEWS BRIEFS
BUSINESS NEWS NO 152