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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
National
Anita McSorley & Joe O'Shea

Controversial 'Death Star of the oceans' super trawler fishing near Irish coastline

Concerns have been raised about a super trawler dubbed the 'Death Star of the ocean' which is fishing near the Irish coastline.

The FV Margiris is the world's second-largest floating fish processing vessel and is equal in length to 14 regular sized trawlers.

It drags vast nest stretching the distance of six football pitches and it's claimed to be "a threat to fishing communities and their seas".

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Environmentalists and the Irish fishing sector have raised concerns, with tracking maps showing it currently off the Cork coast.

They are expected to continue to monitor the FV Margiris as it makes it's way up the south west coast of Ireland.

The FV Margiris and other factory fishing ships like it have already been banned from Australian waters.

Critics including Greenpeace claim that it clears large swathes of ocean of virtually all marine life, including pods of dolphins that Greenpeace claim have been pictured caught in its nets.

Its vast nets are dragged at mid-depth level (rather than on or close to the sea bed) and fish are pumped aboard using a vacuum system, Cork Beo reports.

The Lithuanian-registered, Dutch-owned and operated Factory Trawler is hugely controversial and capable of catching and freezing up to 250 tonnes of fish a day using 'mid-water' nets that target species such as horse mackerel and pilchards.

Its operators have been accused of leaving many tonnes of unwanted and dead fish in its wake, the so-called 'bycatch' that is not commercially valuable.

Fishing sector and environmental groups in Ireland, the UK and elsewhere in Europe have called for these 'vacuum cleaners of the seas' to be banned outright to protect stocks and marine environments.

The Blue Planet Society, which campaigns on ocean conservation, has warned that these types of ships can wipe out both stocks and sustainable, local fisheries such as the ones Ireland is trying to foster off our coasts.

The FV Margiris (PA)

The group said: “The capacity of these trawlers is equivalent to dozens of small-scale fishing vessels, and sustainable small-scale fisheries cannot compete with industrial super-trawlers.

"We think these vessels will undoubtedly come into contact with short-beaked common dolphins, endangered bluefin tuna and over-fished sea bass.”

However, the company which operates the FV Margiris, Dutch fishing giant Parlevliet & Van der Plas, has insisted that the vessel does not create the amount of bycatch it's critics claim and that by targeting shoals of fish at mid-depth in the sea rather than dragging a net across the seabed, it can actually cause less damage to marine environments that traditional trawlers.

The company says it has an “excellent reputation for sustainable fishing”.

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