Pooling data from more than 4,900 European-flagged bottom trawlers—together spending more than 5.5 million hours fishing on average each year in the waters of the European Union, the UK, Norway and Iceland—the research demonstrates that atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from disturbed seafloor sediments are a major contributor to these costs. The study concludes that the net costs of bottom trawling to society are 90 times greater than the €180 million in profits raked in by the fishing industry each year.

“Our study makes it clear that bottom trawling in European waters is not just an environmental disaster, it’s an economic failure,” said Professor Enric Sala, National Geographic Explorer in Residence and one of the authors of the study, titled “The value of bottom trawling in Europe.”