“The UK Government has been striving night and day to
help the industry and I am encouraged that solutions
now in place are beginning to bear fruit,” he said
after the latest meeting of the Scottish Seafood Export
Working Group, attended online by the Scottish Seafood
Association and Scottish Fishermen’s Federation.
The Minister also spoke with DFDS, the logistics
experts who operate the Larkhall hub, through which
much of Scotland’s seafood exports pass.
He said:
It is essential that we know precisely what
difficulties are arising so we can tailor solutions.
The excellent feedback from DFDS is massively
helpful. We are working to streamline systems, while
supporting exporters and partners such as DFDS, and
the commitment to making the system work is clear
across the board.
The UK Government has acknowledged there have been
difficulties and we want to work together to provide
solutions and restore confidence within this crucial
sector so that world-class Scottish seafood can be
harvested at sea and sped from port to plate for
customers here and abroad.
A £23m additional support scheme for the seafood
sector has been announced and the UK Government knows
the urgency of rapid delivery. Meetings such as
today’s allow us to take on board the industry’s
concerns about the eligibility for that support fund,
about making it swift and readily accessible.
There are still issues with the supply chain and we
are doing all we can to ease them. I have today
written to Scottish Government’s Cabinet Secretary
for the Rural Economy, ,
encouraging take-up of our offer of additional
support for Food Standards Scotland at Larkhall and
providing further detail of our direct support for
businesses with the embedding of experts to help
firms with paperwork required by the EU.
We want a workable, sure-footed system so the
industry can maximise the benefits of Britain’s new
status as an independent coastal state, outside the
Common Fisheries Policy.
The £23m fund will be targeted at fishing export
businesses who can evidence a genuine loss in exporting
fish and shellfish to the EU. Support will be available
immediately and paid retrospectively to cover losses
incurred since 1 January 2021. The scheme will be
targeted at small and medium enterprises and the
maximum claim available to individual operators will be
£100,000.
The Marine Management Organisation will administer the
scheme on behalf of exporters across the UK. More
details will be available on eligibility criteria in
the coming days. The UK Government will be consulting
industry across the UK and working with the devolved
administrations on these eligibility criteria before
they are confirmed.
Other support provided to the industry includes:
- Constructive dialogue between UK Government and
industry has already helped to resolve a number of
initial problems that caused difficulties for the
industry, including – but not limited to – computer
system glitches.
- Issuing clear guidance on the required IT forms and
paperwork to stakeholder representative groups,
hauliers and businesses.
- Frequent meetings with businesses to understand and
address issues as they arise.
- Working closely with individual businesses to help
them get used to the new procedures required to ensure
that errors or problems are tackled early.
- The UK Government is providing extra physical
resources to support certification in Scottish Hubs.
- The UK Government has provided specialist
certifiers to support Food Standards Scotland and DFDS.
- An experienced certifying officer from Defra is in
Lanarkshire supporting Official Veterinarians with the
issuing of health certificates.
- Additional Official Veterinarians are on standby,
available to Scottish Hubs, to support exporters if
required.
- Working with French authorities to ensure that
minor administrative issues associated with EHCs do not
prevent goods from entering the market, and working
with the EU Commission to help member states adopt
consistent approaches.
- Providing extensive guidance as part of a range of
measures to help the industry meet new export
requirements, including training, regular engagement
and weekly bulletins. Separately, the Prime Minister
has also committed to providing a £100m fund to help
modernise fishing fleets, the fish processing industry,
and rejuvenate a historic and proud industry in the UK,
on top of the £32m that will replace EU funding this
year.