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Photo: Armadores Punta del Moral
Ayamonte Fleet Docks in Protest Against 'Unbearable' EU Regulation Suffocating the Industry
SPAIN
Tuesday, January 13, 2026, 06:00 (GMT + 9)
Industry leaders warn that Brussels' new bureaucracy ignores the reality of life at sea and threatens the survival of artisanal fishing.
Ayamonte - The fishing fleet of Ayamonte remains at a complete standstill today. Vessels are moored at the docks in a strike against the implementation of the new EU Fisheries Control Regulation, a policy the sector labels as excessively bureaucratic, disconnected from maritime reality, and a direct threat to the viability of small-scale and coastal fishing.

Photo: Armadores Punta del Moral
'Impracticable' Controls for Coastal Vessels
The regulation, which entered into force on January 10, introduces strict requirements that have exhausted the patience of shipowners. Among the most controversial measures are:
According to shipowners, these demands are impossible to meet for much of the fleet. The paralysis in Ayamonte joins a wave of protests spreading across the Spanish coastline, including the Bay of Cádiz, in a generalized mobilization of the fishing sector.
Economic and Human Impact

Alonso Abreu, manager of the Punta del Moral Shipowners' Association, is blunt: "The problem isn't oversight—which we have always defended—but an outsized bureaucracy that fails to consider how fishing actually works." According to Abreu, the safety of the operation is compromised when sailors are forced to manage complex administrative tasks while still at sea.
The Punta del Moral Shipowners' Association warns of severe consequences already on the horizon:
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Immediate economic losses.
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Legal insecurity for captains and owners.
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Risk of disappearance for smaller vessels that lack the manpower or resources to handle this level of oversight.
"We are not here for nonsense or more administrative hurdles. We are here to work and to continue guaranteeing sustainable fishing," Abreu emphasized.
Insufficient Dialogue with Authorities
While the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food has attempted to adapt the rules—such as reducing notification times for certain fleet segments—the sector considers these moves to be mere "band-aids." The demand is clear: the European Commission must engage in real dialogue that offers flexibility.
The final warning from the shipowners is grim: unless there is a change of course in Brussels, the survival of traditional fishing in Spain is at stake. "If the course is not corrected, many vessels will be unable to continue operating," they concluded.
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