Don't reopen the EU Common Fisheries Policy (CFP). Implement it.
The European Commission's evaluation confirms what environmental NGOs across Europe have long argued: the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP)'s challenge is not its design, but its implementation.

More than a decade after the 2013 reform, the European Commission has published its first comprehensive evaluation of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP). The assessment arrives at a critical moment for the Baltic Sea, where fish populations are in deep crisis and ministerial decisions on the 2027 fishing opportunities are approaching.
What the evaluation tells us
First, it confirms that the CFP's core objectives remain relevant. The Commission states that the CFP's "broad and comprehensive objectives allow it to cater to many emerging issues." The evaluation finds that while implementation gaps remain, "the fundamental pillars of environmental, economic and social sustainability are however not put into question."
Second, the evaluation identifies clear examples of where the CFP has delivered results. The Commission points to reduced fishing pressure towards sustainable levels, strengthened science-based management through expanded data collection and the central role of MSY-based assessments, progress in ecosystem-based approaches, and improved stakeholder involvement through regionalisation and Advisory Councils.
These are not minor achievements. They demonstrate that the CFP framework can deliver results when its provisions are effectively implemented.
Third, the evaluation repeatedly points to implementation and enforcement as the main areas where progress is still lacking. The Commission explicitly notes that "inefficiencies and gaps identified in the evaluation and by stakeholders are often dependent on the full implementation of CFP provisions or on detailed provisions and implementation of secondary legislation."
In other words, many of the shortcomings identified are linked not to the objectives of the CFP itself, but to how existing rules have been implemented and enforced.
A consistent picture
Taken together, the findings paint a consistent picture: the CFP is not failing because its objectives are wrong. Rather, its full potential remains unrealised because key provisions have not been consistently implemented and enforced across all fisheries and all Member States.
For environmental NGOs across Europe, this reinforces a message we have been making for years: the CFP's biggest challenge is implementation, not design. The Commission's own conclusions point in the same direction. Where the policy has been effectively applied, it has delivered positive outcomes. Where implementation has fallen short, so too have the results.
A message to Fisheries Ministers
As Fisheries Ministers prepare to discuss the evaluation at the upcoming AGRIFISH Council on 22 June, they should take note of the Commission's own conclusions. The evaluation does not point towards a need to reopen the CFP. Instead, it points towards a need for stronger implementation, better enforcement and greater political commitment to delivering on the objectives already agreed.
Our message to fisheries ministers is simple:
- Don't reopen the CFP.
- Implement it.
- Enforce it.
- Deliver it.
The tools are already there. The commitments have already been made. What is needed now is the political will to enforce them.
Visit our webpage to find out more: Hold the line on the Common Fisheries Policy.


