
Fishing port of Roscoff
Fishing port, commercial port and marina Presence of a fish market
Flotilla of 40 fishing vessels (mainly coastal fishing) 1500 deep-sea trawlers landing fish every year.

A busy port that is home to several state organisations and fishing businesses. Including a seafood processing plant, an ice plant, fisherman’s co-op, and shipping agents. Cruise liners and island ferries also dock here.
30 x >20m fishing vessels are based at the port, the majority are whitefish trawlers.
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A Bobcat and Teleporter are available on site.
• Currently EOL goes to landfill, reusable/ recyclable components such as metal are stripped beforehand.
• EOL Spanish/ French nets go back to relevant country via trucks that deliver services to these fishermen.
• Waste that currently has a value stream: metal, wood palette, oil, rubber goes to the tyre centre, ICW, batteries, carboard, wire rope, glass, small oil drums (25 litre)
• The Harbour Master is contacted by Merchant vessels prior to arrival in port
• Waste is collected from enclosed waste skips provided on the piers and is collected daily or twice daily depending on vessel traffic in the harbour.
• Currently EOL goes to landfill, reusable/ recyclable components such as metal are stripped beforehand.
• Category 1 Waste Skips are provided for vessels arriving from international ports.
• Fees are per Statutory Instrument 214 of 2012
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• The port is named as a Fishing for Litter port, however, there is currently very little FfL activity is taking place.
• However, studies have been carried out in the past by BIM/CTC monitoring/ categorising waste in FfL skips.
• In 2023, 30m3 of compacted PFW was collected
• In the past year, BIM/CTC have ben working with the port to implement reporting using waste characterisation codes.
• Communication on legislation, Bye Laws and relevant activity in the harbour are communicated via harbour notices, posted locally and via emails.
• There is a net storage/ maintenance area for nets in use.
Objectives:
The Harbour management actively sought means of recycling nets, however, to date, none is provided for within the state. The disposal of used gear is the responsibility of the net owner, the harbour no longer accepts end of life fishing gear.

Fishing port, commercial port and marina Presence of a fish market
Flotilla of 40 fishing vessels (mainly coastal fishing) 1500 deep-sea trawlers landing fish every year.

Commercial, nautical-sport, tourism, fishing, and shipyard activities, fish market.
Fishing practice: for WIF, three trawlers from the Mares Circulares project (with lengths ranging from 28 to 36 meters) are collaborating
Landings: Atlantic mackerel, European anchovy, and Atlantic bonito

This is a multi-purpose port which accommodates approx.
20 trawlers, 5 scallop boats and 25 inshore vessels for crab, lobster & whelk. In addition, charter deep-sea angling vessels, tourboats to the Saltee Islands, and leisure crafts use the port.
There are also seafood processing plants next to the port.

General cargo (paper, wood, fruit, steel), bulk solids (grains, flours, and fertilizers), ship services (construction, repair, fuel, oils…), fishing activity (fresh and frozen), fish auction.
Fishing practice: 77 vessels and ships (mainly inshore, 12 trawlers operating in the Grand Sole fishing grounds, 4 coastal trawlers, and 8 operating in Portuguese waters)
Landings: Sardine, horse mackerel, Atlantic mackerel, Atlantic bonito, spider crab, velvet crab, shrimp, Norway lobster, hake, European hake (whiting), blue whiting, squid, monkfish, scorpionfish, red gurnard, sole, cuttlefish, octopus, conger eel, ray, others

Multiple port activities, highlighting liquid and solid bulk traffic, as well as general cargo. Fishing is the main pillar of the port and has a fish market.
Fishing practice: 94 vessels (mostly small-scale), but the number rises to 190 when including boats that unload at the fish market but are not based at the port.
Landings: Poor cod, horse mackerel, mackerel, sardine, common bream, European anchovy, starling, hake, whiting, sole, megrim, skate, dogfish, black scorpionfish, monkfish, John Dory, red mullet, rockling, pollock, pipefish…

Fishing port and marina
No fish market but fish preparation area 7 fixed vessels (small-scale coastal fishing)

Fishing port, commercial port and marina. Presence of a fish market Flotilla of 55 fishing vessels :
mainly dredgers & caseyeur (pot vessels)

Fishing, seafood processing and sales.
Marine leisure cruises, sailing club, tourism.
Fishing practice: There are currently 5 pelagic trawlers, 36 demersal trawlers and 12 crabbers.
Landings: Prawn, Crab and white fish

Fishing port
A fish market (1st auction in Normandy and 6th in France) Fleet of 61 vessels (mainly trawlers)