Since the start of the year, Greece’s Ministry of Agricultural 
Development and Fishing has approved 763 applications for boat 
demolitions. 
 
 
 
Campaign to salvage traditional fishing boats
 
 An ongoing campaign by Kathimerini, Skai TV and the Traditional Boats 
Association of Greece, among several other bodies fighting to save the 
Greek caique, has rallied the support of an important ally, with the 
Regional Authority of the Southern Aegean launching an online campaign –
 #savekaikia – to raise public awareness about the issue. 
 
The aim of the campaign is to convince the European Commission to 
reverse a directive which has resulted in the destruction of a large 
part of the bloc’s fleet of wooden fishing boats by demonstrating that 
not only is it an ineffective way to tackle overfishing, but it is also 
erasing an important aspect of Europe’s maritime tradition. 
 
The issue of traditional fishing boats dates back to 1996, when the 
European Union started paying fishermen to hand in their licenses (in 
addition to scrapping their boats). Along with most of what was once 
Europe’s biggest fleet of wooden fishing boats, the country has also 
seen the disappearance of specialized related professions such as marine
 carpenters. 
 
Southern Aegean Governor Giorgos Hatzimarkos was born and raised on the 
island of Rhodes and knows first-hand what it means to depend on the sea
 for one’s livelihood and to watch a boat being built by hand. He hopes 
not only to salvage such boats from the scrapyard, but also to create 
incentives for saving traditional vessels. 
 
The European Union directive, meanwhile, dictates that the only boats 
that are allowed to be spared from the scrapheap must be placed in an 
enclosed area as exhibits and never sail again. Efforts by the Greek 
Ministry of Culture to this end, however, have been limited to a very 
small number of vessels, and not very noteworthy ones at that. 
 
“We have a proposal and an action plan for an alternative use of these 
boats, which we will be presenting to Brussels,” says Hatzimarkos. “We 
are calling for an end to the destruction of traditional boats and for 
incentives so that they can be used as leisure or touring vessels.” 
 
Since the start of the year, the Ministry of Agricultural Development 
and Fishing has approved 763 applications for boat demolitions. “The 
issue is not for the fishermen to lose out on the money, but for there 
to be a way that they can change their boat’s usage without getting just
 20 percent of the subsidy, as is the case right now,” says Hatzimarkos. | 
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