Brexit offers hope for Irish oyster farmers

Brexit offers hope for Irish oyster farmers
In this photo taken on April 26, 2017, Brexit posters are pictured at the border crossing at Muff in Co Donegal near Lough Foyle, on the border with Northern Ireland and Donegal in the Republic of Ireland. (AFP)
Updated 01 May 2017
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Brexit offers hope for Irish oyster farmers

Brexit offers hope for Irish oyster farmers

GREENCASTLE: For many on the oyster-rich shores of the River Foyle estuary on the northern tip of Ireland, Britain’s departure from the EU cannot come soon enough.
The hope is that Brexit will solve a decades-old sovereignty dispute over the waterway between British-ruled Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
The stand-off has led to a boom in the unauthorized cultivation of oysters on Lough Foyle, which licensed Irish oyster farmers say threatens their lucrative export industry.
“After almost 100 years of failing to deal with the issue, Brexit will now force the two sides to settle the issue once and for all,” said Seamus Bovaird, a former manager of the Lough Foyle Fishermen’s Co-Op.
When Ireland was partitioned in 1921 the main focus was on establishing peace after a bruising war of independence that led to the creation of two states on the island. Whether by accident or willful neglect, the British government and the newly created Irish Free State left the ownership of Lough Foyle out of the terms of the negotiated settlement.
Elsewhere, along the open border between Ireland and Northern Ireland, residents and businesses are concerned that new customs checks will be imposed once Britain is out of the EU.
But on Lough Foyle, Brexit spells greater legal certainty, according to Enda Craig, a member of the Loughs Agency, a cross-border body that supervises the waters but has no powers over aquaculture.
“When Brexit comes in it will force the hand of the Irish government because...the EU will have to ask it where its borders lie and then regulation can be enforced,” Craig told AFP.
Four years ago, there were 2,000 oyster beds, now the Loughs Agency estimates there are around 30,000.
Only a small fraction has official licenses.
With few employment prospects in the area, many have seized the opportunity created by the territorial spat.
These oyster farmers consider themselves unlicensed rather than illegal but they still shy away from publicity and have consistently refused interviews.
Craig compared the proliferation to the Klondike gold boom in Canada at the end of the 19th century.
“This is the Irish equivalent of the Klondike — a marine gold rush with no enforcement, no guaranteed health and safety supervision or environmental controls,” he said.
Lough Foyle has strategic status too, providing access to the busy port of Derry in Northern Ireland.
Once Britain leaves the bloc, this could mean British shipping having to use EU waters.
The majority of the oysters are believed to be exported to France — by far the biggest market for the lucrative shellfish.
This is a gray area as oysters farmed by unlicensed operators risk being mixed with legitimate ones once they are in the hands of intermediaries.