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Fisheries Convention

Fisheries Convention
London Fisheries Convention
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  Parties (coastline involved)
  Parties (coastline not involved)
  Signatories
Signed 9 March 1964; 53 years ago (9 March 1964)
Location London, United Kingdom
Effective 15 March 1966; 51 years ago (15 March 1966)
Condition 8 ratifications
Signatories 12
Parties 12
Depositary Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Languages English and French

The Fisheries Convention or the London Fisheries Convention is an international agreement signed in London in relation to fishing rights across the coastal waters of Western Europe, in particular the fishing rights in the North Sea, in the Skagerrak, in the Kattegat and on the European Atlantic coast. It gives right of full access to the fishing grounds between 6 and 12 nautical miles of the national coastline to the fishing industry of those contracting parties that had already been fishing there in the period 1953–1962.

This agreement is largely superseded to the Common Fisheries Policy (the CFP), as all parties are members of the European Union.

Between Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Netherlands, United Kingdom the "International Convention for regulating the police of the North Sea fisheries outside territorial waters" (the North Sea Fisheries Convention) of 1888 applied which allowed fishing in each other's waters up to 3 miles from the coast line. The United Kingdom denounced this convention in 1963 in order to allow setting up a 12-mile exclusive fishery zone. After denunciation it invited the parties to that convention and several others to negotiate on several issues related to fisheries, which resulted in the Fisheries Convention.

Negotiations took place between the parties of the European Economic Communities, the European Free Trade Association, the Commission of the EEC, as well as Iceland, Ireland and Norway.

The convention has 12 parties, while 1 signatory (Luxembourg) signed but did not ratify. Poland is a non-signatory which acceded to the convention after its entry into force.

The UK denounced the convention on 3 July 2017, effective 2 years later or (if that is on a later date) upon Brexit.

The convention can be denounced from 20 years of its entry into force after a two years' notice. On 2 July 2017 the United Kingdom announced that the Government would give formal notice on the next day (3 July 2017) to denounce and withdraw from, which it did on 3 July 2017 effective 2 years later or upon Brexit. which might have an effect on non-British fishing fleet that have used part of the 6–12 nautical-mile-zone of the UK (and also of the Isle Man and the Channel Islands) under the convention.


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