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EU's mackerel blockade will not affect Iceland: Reykjavik Reykjavik (AFP) Jan 14, 2011 Iceland will not be impacted by a European Union decision to block Icelandic fishing boats from unloading mackerel until a dispute over quotas is resolved, the government in Reykjavik said Friday. "This does not come as much of a surprise to us, nor will it affect Iceland in any way," Icelandic fisheries ministry spokesman Bjarni Hardarson told AFP. "Mackerel has always been unloaded in Iceland and the plan has never been to unload it anywhere else in Europe, as we work it from here," he added. Iceland and the EU have been locked in a "mackerel war" since the Nordic nation raised its mackerel catch quota to levels unacceptable to the 27-nation bloc as well as other partners, including Norway. A statement from the EU chair of the European Economic Area -- which includes the EU plus Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein -- said it called a special meeting Friday to inform partners of potential EU measures "to prohibit the landing of Icelandic mackerel in EU ports." "We will implement these measures without delay," the statement said. The EEA agreement enables parties to refuse landings of fish when there is "serious disagreement". Hardarson meanwhile pointed out Friday that Icelandic law also already blocks foreign ships from unloading mackerel at the island nation's ports. This kind of legislation is the norm, he said, adding "every nation unloads at their own docks in accordance with EU and Norwegian laws." Iceland, which has applied to join the EU, raised its mackerel quota to 130,000 tonnes in 2010, compared to 2,000 tonnes in previous years, and announced it would raise it again to 146,000 tonnes in 2011. Negotiations between Iceland, Norway and the European Union failed last year. Iceland condemned a decision by the EU and Norway to give themselves a quota of nearly 584,000 tonnes for 2011 in the absence of an agreement. Hardarson meanwhile stressed Friday that "of course we want to reach an agreement (with Norway and the EU). We find that to be very important." "Iceland has always been ready to sit down at the negotiating table," he insisted. Reykjavik has, along with the semi-autonomous Danish territory of the Faroe Islands which also tripled its quota to 85,000 tonnes, argued that global warming is pushing more mackerel further north into their waters.
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