Deputy PM urges strengthening management, oversight in combating IUU fishing

Deputy Prime Minister Tran Hong Ha, who heads the National Steering Committee on Combating Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) Fishing, has chaired the committee’s 30th meeting during which he called for the improvement of the institutional framework, and strengthened management in the fight against IUU fishing.

Ha emphasised that while data on outstanding administrative sanctions at the local level have been fully compiled, inspections and audits in several localities revealed that more than half of the cases lacked sufficient legal grounds, were incomplete, or had exceeded the statute of limitations, resulting in their closure. This situation, he stressed, reflects shortcomings in enforcement discipline and accountability.

He instructed the Ministries of Agriculture and Environment, National Defence, Public Security, Justice, and Science and Technology, together with the Government Inspectorate, to continue deploying inter-sectoral inspection teams to examine how localities are implementing directives from the Prime Minister and the National Steering Committee, as well as recommendations raised by the European Commission (EC). These inspections must clearly identify the responsibilities of provincial and municipal leaders and relevant departments, and include random checks of cases reported as completed, to be finalised before February 15.

Local authorities were required to develop comprehensive inspection and supervision plans, with clear assignment of responsibilities to provincial leaders, departments, and agencies. Priority must be given to reviewing administrative sanctions imposed on violating fishing vessels, proactively re-examining case files, sanctioning progress and closed cases, and ensuring strict and consistent enforcement. Any new violations must be handled immediately, without delays.

The Deputy PM underscored the need to clarify local responsibility in managing vessels whose fishing licenses have been revoked due to non-compliance. Provincial leaders were instructed to tighten control down to the grassroots level, clearly assigning responsibility to commune-level People’s Committee chairpersons and commune police chiefs, and identifying precisely where each non-compliant vessel is anchored.

He also called for continued review and refinement of regulations related to data connectivity, administrative penalties, and the revocation and reissuance of licenses for fishing vessels that have been sold or transferred between provinces but have not yet completed re-registration procedures.

The Ministry of Agriculture and Environment was tasked with issuing detailed guidance to ensure these vessels are fully updated in the national fisheries database (Vnfishbase) and effectively managed. Until new registration and licensing procedures are completed, such vessels remain under the responsibility of their original registering localities.

Ha further directed the ministry to urgently simplify procedures for vessels facing difficulties in transferring registration and licenses, while clearly defining the responsibilities of buyers and sellers and stipulating sanctions for the use of vessels that have not completed ownership transfer or met licensing requirements.

He required continued upgrading of the Vessel Monitoring System (VMS), Vnfishbase and the electronic catch documentation and traceability system (eCDT), ensuring data are accurate, complete, clean, real-time and interoperable, including connectivity with the national digital identification system (VNeID). He highlighted that Vnfishbase is a key demonstration of Vietnam’s technological application and transparency in fisheries management, and requested that access be facilitated for EU counterparts to directly reference relevant data.

At the meeting, Nguyen Van Thao, Vietnamese Ambassador to Belgium and head of the Vietnamese Mission to the European Union (EU), said that the EC has appreciated the strong commitment and resolute leadership of the Vietnamese Government, ministries, sectors, local authorities and the National Steering Committee in implementing its recommendations on combating IUU fishing.

The EC has acknowledged Vietnam’s serious and systematic implementation of solutions, particularly in improving the legal framework, applying science and technology, and establishing inspection and monitoring mechanisms from the central to the local levels.

However, it has also pointed out five remaining issues, including incomplete information in some reports that hinders verification; inconsistencies among reported data; a relatively high number of violations, particularly cases involving loss of VMS connectivity and fishing vessels encroaching on foreign waters; and a large proportion of cases that have had to be closed without full resolution. In addition, the EC recommended that Vietnam step up administrative sanctions - a measure that can be implemented quickly and has a direct economic effect.

iuu-2.jpg

Gia Lai steps up communication on new IUU fishing regulations

Gia Lai has been intensifying communications to raise public awareness of the prevention of illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU fishing, particularly following the Government's issuance of Decree No. 301/2025/ND-CP that amends and supplements a 2024 decree on administrative penalties in the fisheries sector.

Mời quý độc giả theo dõi VOV.VN trên
Viết bình luận

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Related

Ho Chi Minh City steps up IUU fishing crackdown
Ho Chi Minh City steps up IUU fishing crackdown

Ho Chi Minh City has intensified efforts to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing, tightening accountability and calling for the thorough handling of violations as part of efforts to have the European Commission’s “yellow card” warning against Vietnam’s seafood sector lifted.

Ho Chi Minh City steps up IUU fishing crackdown

Ho Chi Minh City steps up IUU fishing crackdown

Ho Chi Minh City has intensified efforts to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing, tightening accountability and calling for the thorough handling of violations as part of efforts to have the European Commission’s “yellow card” warning against Vietnam’s seafood sector lifted.