Fishing vessel weekly licence variations 10 October 2025
- Published
- 10 October 2025
- Directorate
- Marine Directorate
- Topic
- Marine and fisheries
Scottish fishing vessel licence variations announced on 10 October 2025
Notice to fishers
New Offshore MPA Fisheries Measures – Effective 16 October 2025
Legally binding restrictions on certain fishing methods will apply in 20 offshore MPAs to protect sensitive habitats and support sustainable fisheries. Speed restrictions apply within restricted areas for vessels using restricted gear. Please familiarise yourself with the new rules. View supporting guidance on coordinates and restrictions online.
The following are presented for clarity of the current fortnightly period.
|
Organisation/ Non-producer Organisation Group |
Type of Licence |
Reason |
Species |
Area of Sea |
Limit |
Effective Date |
|
10 Metre and Under- Non PO (Moray Firth) |
AU |
Effective date |
Mackerel |
IIIa & IV : EU waters of IIa, IIIbcd |
Fortnightly catch limit of 2 tonnes |
0001 hours on 05 October 2025 - 2359 hours on 18 October 2025 |
|
10 Metre and Under- Non PO (Shetland) |
AU |
Effective date |
Mackerel |
IIIa & IV : EU waters of IIa, IIIbcd |
Fortnightly catch limit of 2 tonnes |
0001 hours on 05 October 2025 - 2359 hours on 18 October 2025 |
|
10 Metre and Under- Non PO (Orkney) |
AU |
Effective date |
Mackerel |
IIIa & IV : EU waters of IIa, IIIbcd |
Fortnightly catch limit of 2 tonnes |
0001 hours on 05 October 2025 - 2359 hours on 18 October 2025 |
|
10 Metre and Under- Non PO (IVb) |
AU |
Effective date |
Mackerel |
IIIa & IV : EU waters of IIa, IIIbcd |
Fortnightly catch limit of 2 tonnes |
0001 hours on 05 October 2025 - 2359 hours on 18 October 2025 |
Fishing vessel quota limits tables: 2025 - showing the quota limits applicable to 10m and under and over 10m non-sector vessels.
Fisheries closures table: 2025 - showing all fisheries closures, by group, for Scottish fishing licences.
Important update – Seafood export to the EU January 2026 changes
From 10 January 2026, the EU will require exporters to provide additional information for seafood entering the EU. These changes are likely to affect you if the fish you land is exported to the EU. You can minimise any impacts by familiarising yourself with these changes and providing the required information to your buyer.
The Marine Management Organisation (MMO) is updating the Fish Export Service (FES) to align with the upcoming requirements.
You will also receive another version of this letter if you are a registered user of the Fish Export System.
What is changing
I previously contacted you at the end of June about updates to FES which were introduced in July. These updates allow exporters to input the start date of the fishing trip and transport documentation information into FES.
From 4th September, we will roll out the next set of updates including the requirement to input gear type and fishing area information into FES. Further details are available online at our new Fish, Trace Ship information site.
The additional information is currently voluntary but will become mandatory for exports to the EU from 10 January 2026. If you do not provide the relevant information to your buyer, so that it can be passed on to the exporter, you may not be able to sell your produce.
What you need to do
Please remember #FishTraceShip and get onboard with the changes. By familiarising yourself early with the new information requirements you can support your buyer. Even if you don’t export directly yourself, these changes may affect you as without the additional information, you may not be able to sell your produce.
Get involved
We are also looking for fishers, merchants and exporters to join our research panel to help us design and implement the updates to FES. If you are interested, please sign up here.
Unsubscribe
If you don’t want to hear more about FES, please email UKIUUSLO@marinemanagement.org.uk to be removed from future mailings.
Nicholas Greenwood
Head of Marine Protection and Operational Services
Remote Electronic Monitoring
Remote Electronic Monitoring (REM) is now mandatory for any vessel dredging for scallops in Scottish waters, and for Scottish scallop dredge vessels wherever they are fishing. Read the Remote Electronic Monitoring guidance.
The legislation - The Sea Fisheries (Remote Electronic Monitoring and Regulation of Scallop Fishing) (Scotland) Regulations 2024 – also requires REM on relevant pelagic vessels from 7 March 2026. In order to prepare for the new rules coming into force, remote inspections and system test trips can be carried out from 7 September 2025. Guidance on the pelagic vessel requirements will be published in due course.