Haddock
Melanogrammus aeglefinus
What to check for
Location
Celtic Seas (southern), English Channel (west)
Technical location
Atlantic, Northeast, Bristol Channel, Celtic Sea (North), Celtic Sea (South), English Channel (West), Porcupine Bank, Southwest of Ireland (East), Southwest of Ireland (West), West of Ireland
Caught by
Net (gill or fixed)
Rating summary
For more information about this rating please visit: http://www.cornwallgoodseafoodguide.org.uk/fish-guide/haddock.php
Technical consultation summary
Fishing pressure is now higher than maximum sustainable yield, but within precautionary limits. Stock is fluctuating but is above MSY. Species is moderate to high vulnerability to fishing pressure (55/100), therefore due to fluctuations stock score is 0.25. ICES advice is for a 31% reduction in fishing pressure due to a historic low recruitment in 2022.
How we worked out this Rating
Haddock in the Southern Celtic Seas and English Channel is subject to overfishing and is being overfished.Stock assessments are carried out by the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES). The most recent assessment was published in 2025 using data up to 2025. The next assessment is expected in 2026.The stock assessment defines reference points for fishing pressure (F) and biomass (B). For fishing pressure, there is a target to keep F at or below Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY). For biomass, there is no target. However, there is a trigger point (MSY BTrigger). Below this level, F should be reduced to allow the stock to increase. Because BMSY is not defined, the Good Fish Guide applies its own definition of 1.4 x MSY BTrigger.Catches peaked in 2011 at around 30,000 tonnes but have since declined to around 6,350 tonnes.The reproductive capacity of the stock, or spawning stock biomass (SSB), has been above MSY Btrigger, (12,822 tonnes) since 2001. In 2025, it was estimated to be below this level, at 11,964t, but still above the GFG Bpa proxy (11,025t) and Blim (9,227t). The stock is therefore below target levels.Fishing mortality (F) declined from a peak of 0.74 in 2003 to a low of 0.46 in 2020. It has since increased to 0.57 in 2024, above FMSY (0.353) but below the precautionary limit, Fpa (0.708). The stock is therefore subject to overfishing.ICES advises that when the MSY approach and precautionary considerations are applied, there should be zero catch in 2026. This is a 100% decrease on the previous year's advice, which itself was a 31% decrease on the year before that. The decrease in advice is due to decreases in biomass and low recent recruitment.Recruitment of young fish into the stock has been low since 2019, with a historic low in 2022, which is expected to cause the stock size to decrease in the coming years. Recruitment for stocks are becoming highly dependent on individual year classes, therefore is 2025 recruitment is similar to 2022- 2024, it is very possible that stock will remain below Blim, even with zero catch.
For more information about this rating please visit: http://www.cornwallgoodseafoodguide.org.uk/fish-guide/haddock.php
For more information about this rating please visit: http://www.cornwallgoodseafoodguide.org.uk/fish-guide/haddock.php
References
For more information about this rating please visit: http://www.cornwallgoodseafoodguide.org.uk/fish-guide/haddock.php
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