Mr Philip Hollobone (in the Chair) Share this
contribution We now come to an important debate on the Blue Belt
programme. I should advise the Chamber that we expect a Division
imminently, in which case I shall have to spend the sitting for 15
minutes. James Gray (North Wiltshire) (Con) Share this
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We now come to an important debate on the Blue Belt
programme. I should advise the Chamber that we expect a
Division imminently, in which case I shall have to spend the
sitting for 15 minutes.
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I beg to move,
That this House has considered the Blue Belt programme
for marine protection.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Hollobone. You and I share a birthday, 7 November,
although we were not born in the same year. Thank you for
undertaking to chair this debate.
I am told that Sir David Attenborough’s one great regret
in life is that he has not done enough to protect the
world’s environment. Well, he does not need me or anyone
else in this House to reassure him that he has probably
done more than any other human being to protect the
world’s environment, and I cannot think of a better way
of marking that contribution than the very welcome
decision to name the Natural Environment Research
Council’s new polar research ship, to be launched next
year, not Boaty McBoatface, as some people had predicted,
but the RRS Sir David Attenborough. That is a fitting
tribute to a very great man.
The BBC’s “Blue Planet II” and Sir David’s stark warnings
about the threats posed to the world’s oceans from
over-fishing, plastics and, of course, climate change
will stand for a very long time as a beacon of all that
is wrong in our oceans, but it is also a clarion call for
“action this day”, as Churchill would have put it. It is
a call to all of us in this House to do what we can to
lead the world in a variety of environmental initiatives,
including taking steps to protect the waters around Great
Britain, Northern Ireland and our 14 overseas
territories.
However, before dealing with that, it is worth noting
that my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister recently
reaffirmed our commitment to tackling climate change and
my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs committed us to
taking action on plastics in the oceans. Both those
initiatives are very much to be welcomed. The Wildlife
Trusts, among others, have called for the Government to
develop a national marine strategy to safeguard the
cleanliness and biodiversity of our own territorial
waters after we leave the EU.
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I agree with everything that the hon. Gentleman is
saying. I congratulate him on securing this debate and
remind him that we recently had a long debate on marine
conservation. I hope that he will join the all-party
group that a number of us are setting up—it is a
cross-party group—on marine conservation.
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I will be glad to do so. I am most grateful to the hon.
Gentleman for bringing the group to my notice, although I
do have one caveat, which I will come to later.
The important point about Brexit is that it must not mean
a lessening of any of the environmental standards in our
oceans. Her Majesty’s Government must commit to
ensuring that they are all higher than would have been
the case had we remained a member of the EU.
A full commitment to marine protected areas and the
Government’s Blue Belt programme is of course central to
all that. The Conservative party manifesto for this
year’s general election committed us to working with the
overseas territories to create a network of MPAs covering
more than 2 million square miles of the waters for which
the UK is ultimately responsible. That is a fantastic
opportunity for us to do what is right in our own waters,
but also to lead the world by example across the whole
spectrum of ocean conservation.
I salute the great many people who have called for the
Blue Belt programme and are active in seeking its
implementation, especially my right hon. Friend the
Minister here today, my hon. Friend the Minister for
Universities, Science, Research and Innovation—together
with his father and brother, if I may say so—and, in
particular, my right hon. Friend the Member for Newbury
(Richard Benyon), whom I am very glad to see here today,
and my hon. Friend the Member for Richmond Park (Zac
Goldsmith). They have worked incredibly hard in
advocating the Blue Belt programme. As a result of it, we
have already seen the UK designate new MPAs around South
Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, St Helena and
Pitcairn. We are further committed to designating MPAs
around Ascension and Tristan da Cunha by 2020.
As chairman of the all-party parliamentary group for the
polar regions, I take a particular interest in South
Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, which sit on the
cusp of the Southern ocean and Antarctica. There, the UK
has a real responsibility. After all, it was largely our
whalers and sealers who wrought so much of the appalling
environmental damage there in the 18th and 19th
centuries. They left behind something of an environmental
catastrophe, particularly on South Georgia. We also have
a huge responsibility because South Georgia and the South
Sandwich Islands is an area of such outstanding
scientific importance, both for the study of marine
ecosystems and for monitoring the effects of climate
change, sitting as it does on the cusp of two great
oceans.
I particularly look forward, therefore, to further news
on the exciting project to be called, I think, Discovery
100, which would result in a huge investment of private
funds in the further preservation of the heritage of
South Georgia, as well as its biodiversity following the
enormously successful rat eradication programme over the
past few years. I hope that Discovery 100 might also make
provision for international scientific research
facilities on the island.
The establishment of an MPA around South Georgia and the
South Sandwich Islands in 2012 and its strengthening in
2013 were important steps towards correcting the damage
previously done and preventing anything similar from
happening in the future. The Blue Belt programme is now
driving forward efforts to establish MPAs around
Antarctica, although quite rightly that has to be done
through the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic
Marine Living Resources. The CCAMLR agreement is
incredibly important from a conservation standpoint and
is a critical pillar of the Antarctic treaty system, so
we must do nothing that risks undermining it. Because the
Antarctic treaty suspends all territorial claims to
Antarctica, including our own claim to the British
Antarctic Territory, it is only through international
consensus that MPAs can be established around Antarctica,
including the British Antarctic Territory.
In 2009, the UK helped secure the consensus for the first
Antarctic MPA, covering an area south of the South Orkney
Islands. Last year, CCAMLR agreed an MPA for the Ross Sea
region, and I am delighted that, despite a few setbacks
this year, the Government remain committed to working
towards securing international agreement on designating
additional MPAs in East Antarctica, the Weddell sea and
the Western Antarctic peninsula.
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As a Member who represents a coastal constituency, I well
understand the importance of marine conservation, and I
am very happy to support the Blue Belt programme. Is my
hon. Friend aware of the Sky News Ocean Rescue campaign,
which is today highlighting Antarctica and the challenges
that it faces as a consequence of overuse of plastics and
other pollution around the world?
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I am most grateful to my hon. Friend for bringing that to
my notice. In his short time in the House so far, he has
been assiduous in championing the interests of the oceans
off his own constituency and elsewhere around the world.
I am most grateful to him for that. If I may, I will come
back to the Sky television programme in a moment.
There is more to be done. For example, there are—I think
that my hon. Friend referred to this briefly—current
debates about whether the MPA around South Georgia and
the South Sandwich Islands is sufficient and whether the
protections already in place could or should be further
enhanced. I think that the Sky TV programme is about
that. A review of the MPA is under way at the moment,
with recommendations due to be published next year.
An organisation known as the Great British Oceans
coalition, which consists of six major environmental
conservation organisations, has said that it wants to see
protection of the area around the South Sandwich Islands
in particular enhanced to the fullest degree. Doing that,
it argues, would help the UK to reaffirm our ambition of
becoming a global leader of efforts to protect the
world’s oceans. It would also send a strong message to
other CCAMLR members that the UK is committed to driving
forward international efforts to establish MPAs around
Antarctica in particular. Those are of course extremely
laudable aims that broadly reflect the intent of the Blue
Belt programme, and it is vital that we should not fail
to capitalise on the momentum generated by “Blue Planet
II”, so I am broadly supportive of the aims and efforts
of the Great British Oceans coalition. We all want the UK
to be a global leader in marine protection, but there is
a debate to be had about how best to achieve that,
particularly without disturbing the delicate CCAMLR
discussions on MPAs around Antarctica.
Unlike with other overseas territories, for the past 35
years or so the UK has allowed South Georgia and the
South Sandwich Islands to be covered by CCAMLR rules on
fisheries management. The reason for that is simple.
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands lie within
the Southern ocean convergence and share the same
wildlife as Antarctica. South Georgia and the South
Sandwich Islands are also, however, counterclaimed by
Argentina—a matter that we are well aware of in this
House. By allowing the islands to fall under CCAMLR, the
UK is able to manage those waters effectively within the
international consensus of CCAMLR. Working through CCAMLR
therefore underpins British sovereignty of the waters,
which seems to me to be extremely important. It also
helps to foster greater international co-operation around
Antarctica and the Southern ocean, and, as I mentioned a
moment ago, that co-operation promotes conservation
efforts across the entire white continent and its
surrounding waters.
After all, since 2012 the South Georgia and the South
Sandwich Islands MPA has managed the local fishery and
protected globally significant wildlife very adequately
indeed. There is just one small commercial fishery
licensed by the UK, which amounts to no more than two
vessels fishing for one month a year and taking around 60
to 80 tonnes of fish in the waters. Those two boats also
supply scientific data to CCAMLR, which is no easy task.
Were it not for the fact that we allow those two vessels
to fish for profit in the highly regulated South Georgia
fishery, it would be too expensive for them to go there
and we would therefore lose the scientific data we
currently provide to CCAMLR. In other words, were this
fishery to be closed, as some are calling for and the
coalition seems to be calling for, the UK would no longer
be able to control fishing in the area as effectively.
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It is clear that the hon. Gentleman feels passionately
about this issue, but the campaign that he refers to for
the South Sandwich Islands has made it clear that a
scientifically credible stock assessment is not
incompatible with a fully protected reserve. Does he
agree, therefore, that there is an opportunity to retain
a small scientifically robust stock assessment alongside
the full protection that the coalition is calling for?
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That is a matter that needs to be discussed, and it will
be interesting to hear how the Minister responds to that
point later in the debate. Of course it would be possible
for the two fishery vessels to continue to do their
scientific research there at the same time as there being
full protection, but we have already got full protection
of those waters under the long-standing MPA that is
already there. I am not certain that what is proposed by
the coalition would necessarily add anything to that.
However, it might well undermine our ability to provide
that scientific data and it might invite other CCAMLR
members to say that it is not being done properly and
therefore they—the other CCAMLR members—have some kind of
right to do that scientific fishing research in the area.
I therefore think there are downsides, as well as
upsides, to what the coalition proposes. It is a delicate
political decision, which the Minister might refer to in
his response.
There could, therefore, be a perversity in what the
coalition demand—namely, that more fish will be caught in
the area as a result, rather than less. That is something
that we have to be extremely careful about. There may be
innovative solutions to the problem, particularly
surrounding enforcement of the MPA, perhaps
using the latest satellite technology, and further
discussion may well be warranted about how the UK can
best protect the waters around South Georgia and the
South Sandwich Islands and revitalise international
efforts to increase protection around the world.
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I congratulate my hon. Friend on securing this important
and timely debate. As I understand, one of the Foreign
Office’s concerns about the new larger reserve around the
South Sandwich Islands is that it might result in a
displaced krill fishery, but no krill have actually been
caught around the South Sandwich Islands commercially for
25 years. I am concerned that those concerns have not
been properly thought through, and that the opportunity
to create a 500,000 sq km exclusion zone in this pristine
water, with the conditions that my hon. Friend refers to,
will be missed.
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My right hon. Friend, who knows a great deal about these
matters, makes two points. One is that there will be some
interference with the krill fishing, which has not
actually occurred for many years. That is not one of our
concerns: there is no such fishing, therefore it is not
something we would necessarily be concerned about. His
second point is that we might somehow be sacrificing the
opportunity for this fantastic protected area. That
protected area already exists under the MPA. We already
have that protection for the waters around the South
Sandwich Islands, therefore I am not certain that what is
being proposed would necessarily add very much to it.
My right hon. Friend mentioned the Foreign Office. I pay
particular tribute to the department in the Foreign
Office that runs these matters, in particular the
outstandingly good Jane Rumble, who has done this work
for many years and knows more about Antarctica than most
of us know about anything else. I certainly do not want
to be thought to be blocking efforts to enhance marine
protection around South Georgia and the South Sandwich
Islands, Antarctica or anywhere else in the world, but we
do need to be aware of the law of unintended
consequences. I think that what my right hon. Friend
proposes may suffer from exactly that law—in other words,
protection for the South Sandwich Islands may be the
worse if what he proposes is allowed to occur.
The public reaction to “Blue Planet II” offers us one of
those rare opportunities to make a real difference in the
world, and that must now be seized. We must remind
audiences at home and in the world of our utmost
commitment to the Blue Belt programme. The Government
must listen carefully to the latest proposals for the
South Sandwich Islands, but they must never forget that
those also form part of a bigger picture of environmental
protection and marine conservation in Antarctica and the
Southern ocean. The Blue Belt programme of marine
protected areas around the 14 British overseas
territories is world-leading. I hope that in his response
the Minister will reassert our commitment to it and our
determination to lead the world in the ocean protection
so passionately demanded, most notably by Sir David
Attenborough, and now by a fast growing percentage of the
British electorate as well.
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If we have the consent of the Member in charge, we are in
receipt of an extraordinarily generous offer from Her
Majesty’s Government. The Minister has agreed to
confine his remarks to eight minutes, which means that we
have five minutes of time if anyone else wants to make a
contribution. If no one wishes to take your offer
Minister, the floor is yours.
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr
Hollobone. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for
North Wiltshire (James Gray) on securing this highly
topical debate. As chair of the all-party parliamentary
group for the polar regions, he brings a wealth of
experience on the Arctic and Antarctic, and a close
interest in the health of their marine environments, as
do all the other right hon. and hon. Members in the
Chamber, especially my right hon. Friend the Member for
Newbury (Richard Benyon) who has taken an acute
interest in this issue.
I am particularly grateful for the opportunity to
highlight once again the Government’s Blue Belt
initiative. This is one of the most ambitious
programmes of marine protection ever undertaken. Of the
approximately 6.8 million sq km of ocean surrounding
the UK and our 14 overseas territories, we have
committed to developing measures to ensure the
protection of 4 million sq km by 2020. I personally
announced that commitment at the Our Ocean summit in
Washington in September last year, and am delighted to
confirm that the delivery of the commitment is on
track.
Over the past few weeks much of the country, and
audiences across the world, have been engrossed in the
BBC’s brilliant “Blue Planet II”. Sir David
Attenborough and his team have expertly shone a light
on our incredible oceans and how diverse, important to
the health of our planet and vulnerable they are.
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If I may pray on some of the generous time that the
Minister has offered, I just ask him to consider, as
part of the very exciting Blue Belt policy, that
certain problems exist not only for marine ecosystems
and the species we want to see recover but the people
who live on the islands and on whose support we depend.
In particular, in Ascension Island there are very real
difficulties with the prosperity of that community as a
result of the failures to make the runway safe for use.
Can my right hon. Friend the Minister assure us that
investment is being made in Ascension Island? That will
ensure that the people of that island can really
support the marine protected area because they have a
viable existence on the island.
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Air access to Ascension Island resumed on 18 November,
and a monthly air service has begun to and from
neighbouring St Helena. Most workers on Ascension are
from St Helena; as a Minister for the Department for
International Development, I was largely responsible
for building the airport there, which I am pleased to
say now works. Employers on Ascension confirm that the
monthly air service meets their current needs.
To return to “Blue Planet”—I risk being pressed for
time if I do not get through what I need to tell the
House—the series highlighted the many pressures that we
are putting on our oceans, including the scourge of
plastic waste, the unpredictable effects of global
warming and atmospheric pollution and the danger of
overfishing. Many of those challenges—perhaps most
of them—must be addressed at the global level, and the
UK will play a full and active leadership role in that
work. Yet there is also good evidence that establishing
well designed, effectively managed and properly
enforced marine protection measures can help parts of
the ocean withstand some of those pressures.
Our Blue Belt initiative is committed to doing just
that. We have already declared large-scale marine
protected areas in five of our overseas territories—St
Helena, Pitcairn, the British Indian Ocean Territory,
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands and the
British Antarctic Territory, representing a total of
2.9 million sq km, or more than 40% of British waters.
Of this, 1.5 million sq km, or more than 20% of our
waters, are now designated as highly protected and
closed to all commercial fishing.
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At this point I feel obliged, as I always do when “Blue
Planet” is mentioned, to say that the BBC natural
history unit is based in Bristol and does tremendous
work. The Minister touched on the issue of plastic
pollution. Is he aware of the recent study by the
University of Hull and the British Antarctic Survey,
which found that plastic pollution in the Antarctic was
five times as bad as predicted? To deal with the
problem, it is not enough to create marine protected
areas; we must do much more to tackle the problem of
microplastics at source.
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I fully accept what the hon. Lady says. We are focusing
primarily on fishing in this debate, but the issue of
plastics is of growing significance, and I hope that
tackling it can be a cross-party endeavour. It is not a
party political issue; we all want the same objectives,
and the more that we work together across the party
divide with one loud voice for the United Kingdom, the
better we can make improvements for the world.
To return to what I was saying, we are not stopping
with the efforts that I just described. Two further
overseas territories, Tristan da Cunha and Ascension,
have committed to declaring marine protection measures
across their waters by 2020. Working with our two main
Blue Belt delivery partners, the Centre for
Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science and the
Marine Management Organisation, we have been supporting
those territories to ensure that each marine protection
regime is well designed, managed, monitored and
enforced. Each territory has its own unique environment
and particular needs, so there is certainly no
one-size-fits-all solution. Each territory must feel a
sense of involvement and ownership if we want the Blue
Belt to be a lasting legacy.
The Blue Belt is already delivering results: for
example, real-time analysis of satellite data has
helped build intelligence on illegal fishing and inform
long-term enforcement solutions. Overseas territory
Governments have received advice and support to
strengthen fisheries legislation and licensing and
enforcement regimes. Targeted scientific cruises have
been undertaken or are planned to assess biodiversity
and analyse fish stocks. Also, links between the
territories and appropriate regional fisheries
management organisations have been strengthened.
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The Minister has another five minutes so can I ask him,
as he is an influential member of Government, to ensure
that we have the right resources and investment in the
research that is desperately needed to tackle the
problems that he just mentioned?
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The hon. Gentleman has hit on an important point. It is
not just about being in these areas; it is about what
we do while we are there. The scientific effort that we
make, in which we are a world leader, is important to
preserve; I had a meeting about it this very morning.
Of course, as with any Government initiative, we are
not immune to critics. While watching “Blue Planet”,
many Members of this House will have received direct
tweets and messages encouraging them to sign up to the
Blue Belt charter, or “back the Blue Belt”. I am
delighted that in this debate, we have demonstrated the
broad cross-party consensus on the importance of
protecting our marine environment.
Although the Blue Belt Charter mainly includes
already-announced Government commitments, it also
focuses on the designation of large-scale no fishing
areas. That is not always the most appropriate or most
effective approach. We are also not willing to
sacrifice the livelihoods and wellbeing of those in our
overseas territories who depend on a healthy fishery,
as my right hon. Friend the Member for Newbury (Richard
Benyon) mentioned a moment ago.
The charter includes a call for the South Sandwich
Islands in the far south Atlantic to be designated a
complete no-take marine reserve. Those waters are
already part of a marine protected area declared in
2012, which includes some of the strictest fisheries
management rules in the world. The UK is proud of its
effective management of South Georgia and the South
Sandwich Islands; since the bleak outlook of the 1970s
and 1980s, caused by significant over-fishing, the
territory is now internationally recognised as having
one of the best-managed fisheries in the world.
It might seem, as was said earlier, counter-intuitive
to argue against a total ban on fishing when our
objective is to protect the oceans. However, sometimes
a small footprint of extremely well managed and
controlled fishing can help safeguard waters against
illegal incursions and provide valuable scientific
information about the health of the wider ocean. Simply
prohibiting fishing in one area, only to see vessels
concentrate somewhere else, is not always the most
appropriate conservation approach. Let me reassure the
House that we are by no means complacent on this issue.
We do not wish to see a return to illegal fishing in
our waters.
Given the campaign for a complete closure of the South
Sandwich Islands fishery, we are urgently considering
it, including through consideration of the scientific
advice prepared for the current five-year review of the
existing MPA. We are also assessing what implications
such action would have for the UK’s leadership role
within the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic
Marine Living Resources, within whose remit the waters
of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands lie.
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The information that we have on krill stocks is that
the quota given is 130% above the scientifically
advised level. Surely there is no real case to make for
the displacement of fisheries.
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That is exactly the kind of expert advice that we are
assessing at the moment. We want to ensure that any
policy decision is founded on scientific advice of the
highest possible quality and a sensible understanding of
possible unforeseen consequences in the practical world,
so that we can bring all the threads together to take the
most responsible decision. As I said earlier, there are
no party politics involved. We just want to do what is
good for the world, the waters and the islanders, and
what is good for conservation and the preservation of our
planet.
I am proud that this Government have been in the vanguard
of marine protection. We recognise our essential role as
custodians of one of the largest marine areas on the
planet, and we understand the importance of protecting
our oceans, as well as the magnitude of the challenge.
Our commitment to delivering on the promises that I made
in Washington last year is absolutely steadfast and
enduring. I am grateful for the support of those who have
engaged in this debate, and I hope that we can all work
together for a better planet in the years and decades
ahead.
Question put and
agreed to.
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