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- globalnews
The law will come into force in national parks within two years and in all of the country’s marine protected areas by 2030
Greece has become the first country in Europeto announce a ban on bottom trawling in all of its national marine parks and protected areas.
The country said will spend €780m (£666m) to protect its “diverse and unique marine ecosystems”.
The Greek prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, told delegates at the Our Ocean conference in Athens on Tuesday: “We’ve established two additional marine national parks, one in the Ionian and one in the Aegean, increasing the size of our marine protected areas by 80% and covering one third of our marine territorial waters.
“We will ban bottom trawling in our national parks by 2026 and in all marine protected areas by 2030.”
He said he would also establish a state-of-the-art surveillance system, including drones, to enforce the ban.
Hasn’t the UK already done this? The French are currently protesting against it.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/apr/15/environment-conservation-france-protest-uk-ban-bottom-trawling-fishing-uk-eu-trade-deal-tca
Wait - weirdly it’s the same journalist who wrote both articles. How did she manage to write an article two days ago about a UK ban, and then write again yesterday about Greece being the first European country to do this?
Perhaps because the UK is no longer part of the European Union. Technicalities.
It doesn’t say EU, it says Europe. The Guardian is a British newspaper, they know the difference.
Brexit meant Britain left the EU, it didn’t literally move Britain to a different continent.
I agree with you, just saying that the journalist might have used that line of thought to make their headline catchier.