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1 Using the ‘Aarhus option’ Bluefin tuna case study.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Using the ‘Aarhus option’ Bluefin tuna case study."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Using the ‘Aarhus option’ Bluefin tuna case study

2 2 Background to case

3 3 Background to case (2) March 2010: suspicious transfer of live BFT to Malta by Italian trawlers Inconsistencies in catch documentation Commission failed to confirm legality

4 4 EU disclosure request 14 April 2010 All paperwork for the suspicious transfer (catch and transfer declarations, observer report, video) Any & all communication on transfer with Malta, Italy or ICCAT Request made under Regulation 1367/2006 (‘Aarhus’)

5 5 Refusal 8 October 2010 Access to all documents refused based on 3 grounds: Commercial interests Privacy of individuals Ongoing investigation

6 6 Confirmatory Application 29 October 2010 Failure to state proper reasons: No commercial secrets – fishing quotas are public What private data? What harm to the investigation?

7 7 Refusal No. 2 4 March 2011 Commission still refusing, but with intriguing reason:

8 8 Refusal No. 2 (continued) 4 March 2011

9 9 Ombudsman complaint 19 April 2012 Our main arguments: Withholding info on infringements is not compatible with Aarhus. Aarhus exception only for ‘ability of a public authority to conduct an enquiry of a criminal or disciplinary nature’ Convention assumes that public scrutiny, rather than a ‘climate of confidence’, promotes compliance  Petrie ruling doesn’t apply to environmental info

10 10 Ombudsman complaint 19 April 2012 And the Commission ignored the overriding public interest: BFT is key ecological / cultural / economic resource Management of the fishery a ‘travesty’ / ‘disgrace’ EU taxpayers fund the fishing vessels EU taxpayers fund the enforcement Right to know whether fishermen / MS respect the rules And whether Commission is upholding them

11 11 Request no. 2 19 April 2012 (same day) The Commission decision informing Malta of BFT irregularities and asking for an inquiry, plus any annexes; The inquiry report drawn up by Malta; The Commission’s assessment of Malta’s report; The Commission’s follow-up measures, if any; Any correspondence with Malta on further BFT irregularities since refusal of previous request (ie. since March 2011).

12 12 European Voice 7 June 2012

13 13 Commission response 11 June 2012

14 14 Confirmatory application & reply 25 September 2012 As always, Commission missed its deadline due to ‘complexity’ of the request: But:

15 15 Further process 18 February 2013: Second complaint to EU Ombudsman 26 June 2012: the same information requested from Malta under ‘Freedom of Access to the Environment Regulations’ (no reply) 1 September 2012: First-ever appeal to Malta FOI Commissioner (no reply yet)

16 16 Conclusions 1.EU access to info regime is pretty dysfunctional 2.The Commission doesn’t necessarily give more info under Aarhus 3.Will the Ombudsman or Court force them? We’ll see. 4.If you’re a ‘nutty’ NGO or journalist and persist, you may uncover some things – even from refusals.


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