Overview
Status: Protocol in place
Type of agreement: Tuna
Protocol dates: 23 July 2024 – 22 July 2029
EU total financial contribution: €780,000 per year
The EU and Cabo Verde have had a fisheries partnership since 1990.
The fisheries partnership agreement between the European Union and the Republic of Cabo Verde entered into force on 20 March 2007 and is automatically renewed. The current fisheries protocol covers the period from 23 July 2024 to 22 July 2029.
Financial details
EU financial contribution: €780,000 per year, with €430,000 dedicated to supporting the sustainable development of Cabo Verde’s fisheries policy.
Fees for operators:
- First two years of application: €80 per tonne caught (for purse seiners) or €75/t (for longliners and pole-and-line vessels)
- Last three years of application: €85 per tonne caught (for purse seiners) or €80/t (for longliners and pole-and-line vessels).
Access to waters
Reference tonnage: 7,000 tonnes per year
Fishing access: Vessels from Spain, France, Portugal can fish for tuna in Cabo Verde waters.
| Fishing opportunities (number of vessels) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spain | France | Portugal | TOTAL | |
| Tuna seiners | 14 | 10 | - | 24 |
| Surface longliners | 17 | - | 5 | 22 |
| Pole and line | 6 | 3 | 1 | 10 |
Sectoral support
The EU provides an envelope of €430,000 per year to support the national strategy for sustainable fisheries. It should contribute to good ocean governance and the promotion of responsible and sustainable fisheries.
EU funding supports the following priorities
- strengthening the monitoring, control and surveillance of fishing activities
- strengthening scientific knowledge of fishery resources
- reinforcing the capacity for sanitary checks of fishery products
- supporting coastal communities (fishing activities, training, employment, fishers' safety and economic development), with a particular focus on measures aimed at women and young people
- strengthening international cooperation
- developing sustainable aquaculture
- supporting the blue economy
Scientific advice
Tuna-like species in the Atlantic Ocean are managed by the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), which includes both the EU and Cabo Verde as contracting parties. The EU and Cabo Verde work together within ICCAT to evaluate and manage tuna stocks. The EU's tuna fleet fishes in compliance with ICCAT rules.
According to the agreement and its implementing protocol, the EU and Cabo Verde can hold scientific meetings to assess and recommend ways to manage fishery resources sustainably.
News

- News announcement
The European Commission has officially launched the European Ocean Board, a high-level expert group supporting the implementation of the European Ocean Pact, the EU’s strategy to better protect the ocean, promote a thriving blue economy and support coastal communities.
- 2 min read

- News announcement
The meeting aims to outline an ambitious set of actions to address the current global biodiversity crisis and declines of migratory species, including the European eel & tope shark.
- 1 min read

- News blog
After a full week at sea, it’s time to drop anchor and take stock. From 2 to 6 March, the European Ocean Days brought together policymakers, scientists, investors, youth representatives and industry leaders in Brussels for its third, and arguably most impactful, edition.
- 4 min read