CELEX: 61999CC0120
Language: en
Date: 2001-06-14
Title: Opinion of Mr Advocate General Ruiz-Jarabo Colomer delivered on 14 June 2001. # Italian Republic v Council of the European Union. # Common agricultural policy - Fisheries - Bluefin tuna - Regulation (EC) No 49/1999 - Statement of reasons - Total allowable catches (TACs) - Allocation of TACs among Member States - Principle of relative stability - Determination of basic data - Complex economic situation - Discretion - International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas - Accession of the Community - Impact on the allocation of TACs to Member States - Principle of non-discrimination. # Case C-120/99.

Important legal notice

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61999C0120

Opinion of Mr Advocate General Ruiz-Jarabo Colomer delivered on 14 June 2001.  -  Italian Republic v Council of the European Union.  -  Common agricultural policy - Fisheries - Bluefin tuna - Regulation (EC) No 49/1999 - Statement of reasons - Total allowable catches (TACs) - Allocation of TACs among Member States - Principle of relative stability - Determination of basic data - Complex economic situation - Discretion - International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas - Accession of the Community - Impact on the allocation of TACs to Member States - Principle of non-discrimination.  -  Case C-120/99.  

European Court reports 2001 Page I-07997

Opinion of the Advocate-General

I - Introduction1. Under Article 173 of the EC Treaty (now, after amendment, Article 234 EC), the Italian Republic asks the Court of Justice to annul Article 2 and the table relating to bluefin tuna in Council Regulation (EC) No 49/1999 of 18 December 1998 fixing, for certain stocks of highly migratory fish, the total allowable catches for 1999, their distribution in quotas to Member States and certain conditions under which they may be fished (hereinafter the Regulation or Regulation No 49/1999).2. The Italian Republic takes the view, for reasons which I shall set out in due course, that the percentages shown in Article 2(1) and the quotas established in Article 2(2), in conjunction with the Annex, are unlawful and cause it serious harm.II - International protection of tuna3. The International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (hereinafter the Convention) was signed in Rio de Janeiro on 14 May 1966 and came into force on 21 March 1969. Its objective is the conservation and management of Atlantic tuna, through the cooperation of the signatories in maintaining the populations of those fish at levels which will permit the maximum sustainable catch.4. In order to achieve the proposed objectives, the Convention established the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (hereinafter ICCAT), which it authorised to make recommendations that become binding on the parties six months after the date of their notification unless an objection is presented within that period. The signatory States agreed to adopt all the measures necessary to ensure implementation of the Convention.5. At its ninth special meeting, which was held in Madrid during November and December 1994, ICCAT fixed, for the first time, owing to overfishing, a total allowable catch of bluefin tuna for 1995, restricting it to the level of catch in 1993 or 1994, whichever was higher. Starting in 1996, measures had to be taken as necessary to reduce catches progressively to 75% of the 1995 quantities, such objective to be achieved before the end of 1998. The States which, like the Italian Republic, were not yet party to the Convention, and the General Fisheries Council for the Mediterranean, were informed of the recommendation and requested to give their cooperation. It was provided that the recommendation would come into effect on 2 October 1995.6. At its 14th regular meeting, held in Madrid in November 1995, ICCAT made a recommendation which, in the light of the large French catches of bluefin tuna landed during 1994, imposed specific limits for France during the three-year period 1996 to 1998 in the Mediterranean Sea and the Eastern Atlantic Ocean. That recommendation, which came into force on 22 June 1996, was repealed by Recommendation 98-5, adopted in Santiago de Compostela in November 1998.7. At the 10th special meeting, held in San Sebastián in November 1996, ICCAT approved a new recommendation, which was officially notified on 3 February 1997 and entered into force on 4 August 1997, under which the catch limit of any Contracting Party which exceeded its quota would, in the subsequent management period, be reduced by 100% of the amount in excess; that figure could be as high as 125% if the catch limit was exceeded in two consecutive management periods. Application of the reduction would be deferred to a management period after the one immediately following the period in which the limit had been exceeded if, at the time the limits were fixed, not all the data relating to the catches for that period were available. Thus, reductions in respect of over-fishing in 1997 would be applied to the 1999 quotas, not the 1998 quotas. This was decided in a supplementary recommendation adopted at the 11th special meeting, held in Santiago de Compostela between 16 and 23 November 1998, which was communicated to the parties on 22 December 1998 and came into force on 21 June the following year.III - Accession of the Community to ICCAT and its repercussions on Community law8. By Decision of 9 June 1986, the Council approved the accession of the Community to ICCAT, which took place on 14 November 1997.9. By Council Regulation (EC) No 65/98 of 19 December 1997, and with the aim of implementing ICCAT's recommendations, the quota of bluefin tuna allocated to the Community for the year 1998 was distributed between the Member States.10. In the third paragraph of Article 1 of the Regulation it was provided that the Commission would negotiate with ICCAT the revision of catch figures for Member States in order to allow for the later adjustment of such Member States' quotas of bluefin tuna. Once the figures had been agreed, the Commission would promptly adjust the quotas of the various Member States.11. In fulfilment of the abovementioned mandate, negotiations were opened with ICCAT. The result was the recommendation adopted at the 11th special meeting. In the new recommendation, which entered into force on 20 August 1999, a total allowable catch of 32 000 tonnes was established for 1999 and of 29 500 tonnes for 2000, of which the Community was allocated 20 165 tonnes and 18 590 tonnes respectively. The allocation of fishing possibilities between the contracting parties was calculated by using as a reference the unrevised figures for the catches of years 1993 and 1994, and the relevant reductions for exceeding the catch quota during 1997, as provided in the San Sebastián recommendation of November 1996 and in the supplementary recommendation adopted in Santiago de Compostela two years later.12. In order to implement the above recommendation, the Council approved Regulation No 49/1999 - the subject-matter of these proceedings - by which it divided the share available to the Community between the Member States, setting the percentage shares in Article 2(1), which provided:The percentages allocated to Member States from the share available to the Community of bluefin tuna stocks in the Eastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean shall be as follows:- France: 33.89%,- Greece: 1.77%,- Italy: 26.75%,- Portugal: 3.23%,- Spain: 34.35%.13. However, ad hoc parameters were set for 1999, in view of the special circumstances due to the Community's accession to ICCAT. For that purpose, Article 2(2) refers to the Annex, which contains the following figures, expressed in tonnes, relating to bluefin tuna in the Eastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea:- Total allowable catches: 32 000- EC: 16 136- France: 6 413- Greece: 126- Italy: 3 463- Portugal: 519- Spain: 5 555- Others (by-catch): 60.14. The above distribution was made as follows: the 60 tonnes set aside, as by-catch, for Member States other than the five that received specific quotas, was deducted from the total available to the Community (20 165 tonnes). The remainder (20 105 tonnes) was divided between those five Member States, in accordance with the percentages stated in Article 2(1) of the Regulation. From the quota thus allocated to each was subtracted any amount by which it exceeded its quota during 1997. As Greece and Italy would have had a very small share after that reduction was made, the Council took away 850 tonnes from the other three States and divided it between the two of them.15. The powers exercised by the Council in Regulations Nos 49/1999 and 65/98 have as their basis Council Regulation (EEC) No 3760/92 of 20 December 1992 establishing a Community system for fisheries and aquaculture, Article 8(4) of which provides:The Council, acting by qualified majority on a proposal from the Commission:...(ii) shall distribute the fishing opportunities between Member States in such a way as to assure each Member State relative stability of fishing activities for each of the stocks concerned; ...;...IV - The proceedings before the Court of Justice16. A part has been played in these proceedings - as well as by the Italian Republic and the Council - by the Commission, the Kingdom of Spain and the French Republic, which have submitted written observationsAt the hearing on 10 May 2001, oral argument was presented by the representatives of the applicant and the defendant and the Agents of the Commission and the Kingdom of Spain.V - Analysis of the pleas supporting the claim for annulment17. The Italian Republic puts forward two claims for annulment of Regulation No 49/1999: one in respect of Article 2(1), and the other in respect of Article 2(2) in conjunction with the Annex (the table relating to bluefin tuna), against which it makes a number of charges, some of which overlap. The other parties intervening in the proceedings have objected to both claims. I shall now analyse the two claims, following the arguments put forward to support them by the Italian Republic and referring, if necessary, to those adduced in response by the other parties.1. Article 2(1) of Regulation No 49/1999A - Inadequate statement of reasons18. The Italian Republic states in its application that the only statement of the reasons on which Article 2(1) is based is found in the fourth recital in the preamble to the Regulation, according to which the percentage shares of the Member States in catches from the Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean stocks for bluefin tuna should be set. The applicant considers that this is merely ostensible reasoning which does not fulfil the requirements laid down in the case-law of the Court of Justice, since it does not explain the allocation of quotas made in the contested provision.19. The statement of reasons is not just a courtesy, nor is it a routine formality. It is a rationalising factor in the exercise of power, facilitating review thereof. It operates both to prevent arbitrariness and to provide protection. That is how it is seen by the Court of Justice which has, on numerous occasions, pointed out that the objective of the statement of reasons required by Article 190 of the EC Treaty (now Article 253 EC) is to enable the persons concerned to ascertain the reasons for the measure and to enable the competent court to exercise its power of review.20. I consider that, as far as Article 2(1) of the Regulation is concerned, the requirements laid down by Article 190 of the Treaty for statements of reasons have been satisfied. In order to account for the introduction of the provision and, therefore, of the percentages it allocates to the Member States listed in it, the Regulation refers to:(1) The Community's accession to ICCAT, the binding nature of ICCAT's recommendations and the adoption of a recommendation setting catch limitations for bluefin tuna;(2) the powers conferred on the Council by Article 8(4) of Regulation No 3760/92 to establish the total allowable catches by stock or group of stocks, the share available to the Community, the allocation of that share among Member States and the conditions under which catches may be made; and(3) the need to set the percentage shares of the Member States.21. In my view, that statement of reasons is adequate in the light of the nature of the measure concerned. In the case of legislative measures intended to be of general and temporarily unspecified application, it is enough if the statement of reasons indicates the general situation which led to their adoption and the general objectives which it is intended to achieve, and if the measures refer to the legal rule which forms the basis of the power exercised.22. The applicant states that, in the preamble to the Regulation, reasons are given for the distribution of the Community quota between the Member States, but none at all for the percentages allocated to them. That observation is correct, but the statement of reasons is not required to contain all the relevant legal and factual aspects, since the crucial point is, as I have indicated, that the reasons which underlie the exercise of power constituted by the decision are duly known by the addressees and by the person called upon to review its legality. Consequently, to determine whether a decision adopted by a Community institution is reasoned, it is also necessary to take into account its context, particularly the legislative context, and the procedure followed for its adoption, with which the Member States may be closely connected.23. The Italian Republic, which joined ICCAT on 6 August 1997 and was notified, prior to that date, of the adoption of the first recommendation limiting the catches of bluefin tuna, participated in the procedure to draw up the Regulation and was aware of the reasons for the adoption of the provision it is contesting. Accordingly, it is stated in the report prepared by the Committee of Permanent Representatives that the Italian delegation (and also the Greek delegation) expressed a general reservation about the proposal for a regulation and, in particular, about the total allowable catches and the quotas. It also called in question the criteria for distribution because, on the basis of the past catches of the Italian fishing fleet, whatever the period of reference chosen, the Italian part of the Community's total catches would not have been below 30%.24. It is clear that the Italian Republic, like the Court of Justice, is fully aware of the reasons why the Council adopted Article 2(1) of the Regulation. It knows the background and objectives of the provision and also knew - before it was approved - the criteria followed for establishing the quota shares set out in it. It cannot therefore complain that the provision lacks a statement of reasons.B - Subsidiary pleas in law(a) The alleged derogation from the principle of relative stability25. In case the allegation that Article 2(1) of the Regulation is not supported by an adequate statement of reasons is not upheld, the Italian Republic puts forward an argument in the alternative and another in the further alternative. The first alleges infringement of Article 43 of the EC Treaty (now, after amendment, Article 37 EC), of the general principles concerning the hierarchy of norms and of Article 8(4)(ii) of Regulation No 3670/92.26. In the applicant's view, this triple infringement stems from the failure to take account of the principle of relative stability of the fishing activities of the various Member States. Unlike Regulation No 65/98, the preamble to the contested Regulation contains no express reference to Article 8(4)(ii) of Regulation No 3760/92. That omission constitutes an even more serious inadequacy than the one indicated above, since no reasons are given for that departure from the norm.27. It adds that there is a close link between the jurisdiction and procedure provided for in the first sentence of Article 8(4) of Regulation No 3760/92 and the rules of application contained in the same paragraph. In the contested Regulation the Council derogated from the principle of relative stability contemplated in Regulation No 3760/92 but should have followed the same procedure for its adoption, that is, consulting the European Parliament, as required by Article 43 of the Treaty. By not doing so, the Council committed the infringements alleged in the application.28. The applicant's argument fails because its premiss is incorrect. It is not true that the contested Regulation does not refer to Article 8(4)(ii) of Regulation No 3760/92. We need only read the references and the third recital in the preamble to see that Article 8(4) of the 1992 Regulation is expressly mentioned twice. In that recital it is stated that, under the aforementioned provision, it is the task of the Council to divide up the share available to the Community among the Member States and it thus seems clear that it will do so in accordance with the requirements it imposes and taking into account the provisions of subparagraph (ii), that is, assuring each Member State relative stability of its fishing activities.29. There is, therefore, neither tacit derogation from the principle of relative stability nor infringement of the 1992 Regulation, of the principle of the hierarchy of norms or of Article 43 of the Treaty.(b) The manifestly inappropriate nature of the criteria adopted for application of the principle of relative stability30. The response to the previous plea in law could have been confined to the formal and external aspects, in the terms in which the plea was raised; however, the Council, moving away from the viewpoint taken by the Italian Republic, states that there is not only a reference in the contested Regulation to the provision which requires the principle of relative stability to be taken into account but in addition that principle was actually applied in apportioning the quota of bluefin tuna available to the Community.31. That is the background to the second argument put forward by the Italian Republic in the alternative to obtain the annulment of Article 2(1) of the Regulation, an argument relating to the actual basis of apportionment.32. The applicant complains that the Council set the percentage shares in the Community quota of bluefin tuna taking account of the catch figures of a single year, not several years. The percentage allocated to Italy would have been significantly higher if the Council had based its decision on a series of catches stretching back over three, five or eight years, not just those of 1993 or 1994.33. The Council does not accept that flexibility in determining the reference period to be taken into account is particularly important when stocks are managed by an international fishing organisation that establishes the quota which the Community receives and must divide between the Member States. The Council believes it acted appropriately by distributing the quota on the basis of the actual catches of bluefin tuna landed by each Member State in 1993 or 1994, since those years had been used as reference years by ICCAT.34. In my view, the reasons given by the Council should be approved by the Court of Justice. The concept of relative stability is established by Regulation No 3760/92 which, in its preamble, lays down guidelines requiring that the Community share of bluefin tuna be distributed with a view to giving fishing activities greater stability, which will safeguard the particular needs of regions where local populations are especially dependent on fisheries and related activities.35. Bearing in mind that concept of relative stability, the Court of Justice has pointed out that the aim of the quotas is to ensure for each Member State a share of the total catch allocated to the Community, determined on the basis of the catches from which traditional fishing activities, the local populations dependent on fisheries and related industries of that Member State benefited before the quota system was established. Accordingly, when stocks, of bluefin tuna in this case, are distributed, the interests represented by each Member State must be weighed up. To be effective, this principle, by its very nature, requires that, in the distribution of quotas, each Member State is allocated a fixed percentage.36. The Council made that allocation in Article 2(1) of the regulation contested by Italy, in which the Member States have retained a fixed percentage of the Community's fishing possibilities, by taking as a reference the total catches landed by each of them in 1993 or 1994, whichever was the higher.That criterion for distribution, already used in Regulation No 65/98, applies the same parameters as those taken into consideration during the Community's negotiations with ICCAT, which were embodied in Recommendation 98-5, and has the virtue of incorporating into the Community domestic sphere the experience acquired since its creation by ICCAT, of which several Member States have been members for some time. The thorough knowledge gained about the development of bluefin tuna catches over almost 30 years and the participation of the various Member States which have fleets dedicated to fishing that stock is put to good use but, at the same time, the needs of coastal communities that are dependent on bluefin tuna fishing are not forgotten.37. We may argue as much as we like about the criterion chosen for allocating quotas, but it falls within the discretion enjoyed by the Council for implementation of the Community's agricultural policy. As a discretionary power, it is subject to judicial review only if there has been a manifest error or misuse of power or if the bounds of the discretion have clearly been exceeded, and no such defect has even been alleged by the applicant in respect of Article 2(1) of the Regulation.38. In short, the Council has respected the principle of relative stability, and not just formally. The quotas given in Article 2(1) of the Regulation were established using a criterion which does not disregard the true position of the bluefin fishing sector in each Member State. The result was bound to be that different quotas were arrived at, which varied to the same extent as the influence which the fishing of that species has on the different national economies. In this case, what would actually have been discriminatory would have been the setting of identical quotas, treating people in different situations in the same manner.39. Furthermore, as the Commission correctly points out in its observations, we cannot avoid the fact that the contested Regulation was adopted after the European Community, which is allocated an overall share, had joined ICCAT. It is possible for the Community duly to fulfil its obligations as a member of ICCAT and for consistency in the policy of preserving the bluefin tuna fishing grounds to be maintained only if the same criteria are applied for intra-Community distribution as are followed for the Eastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean as a whole.2. Article 2(2) of Regulation No 49/1999 and the part of the Annex thereto relating to bluefin tunaA - Absence of a statement of reasons40. In order to seek the annulment of this provision, the Italian Republic alleges, here too, that there is a failure to state the reasons. The only explanation on this matter contained in the Regulation must be sought in its fifth recital. In the applicant's view, this reasoning is merely ostensible and conceals the true reason for the distribution, which is simply to apply to Spain, Greece and Italy the sanctions imposed by ICCAT for exceeding catch limits during 1997.41. The reply here should be the same as the one I have suggested above for the alleged lack of reasons for Article 2(1) of the Regulation. In making its complaint, Italy confuses, and improperly combines, two aspects which, although closely related, should not be merged: the existence of the statement of reasons and its correctness. The plea which I am examining now falls under the first heading and the decision taken by the Court must not go outside that context.42. There is proper reasoning, not only because of the fifth recital in the preamble to the Regulation but also because in other parts of the preamble explanations are given for the contested provision. In the second and eighth recitals reference is made to the obligations assumed by the Community as a contracting party to the Convention and to the establishment by ICCAT of a system of deductions for quantities overfished which differs from the system laid down in the Community legislation.43. In any case, the applicant ultimately learned the reasons for the provision at issue and also the procedure followed for arriving at the specific figures contained in the Annex relating to bluefin tuna; therefore, the objective pursued by the requirement that there should be a statement of reasons was achieved.44. Reference is made to that fact by the Commission, in relation to the ad hoc distribution for 1999 and the data and calculations which led to the setting of the catch limits indicated in the annex for that year, which were submitted in detail to the Member States within the Committee of Permanent Representatives, at which the Italian delegate expressed his disagreement.45. Again, the complaint has no substance. Not only can the grounds for establishing a special distribution for 1999 be inferred from the text of the Regulation itself, but, before its final adoption, the applicant had detailed knowledge of those grounds and of the procedure followed for setting the specific limits stated in the provision it is contesting.46. Whether or not the reasons put forward by the Council to justify the rule which is now being challenged are correct is a different issue, unconnected to whether or not a statement of reasons exists.Also irrelevant, because they fall outside the scope of the point at issue here, are the doubts expressed by Italy regarding the correctness of the Community's allocation of 20 165 tonnes of bluefin tuna for 1999 and the fact that what was actually allocated was the 16 136 tonnes shown in the Annex to the Regulation, the deduction of the amounts by which several Member States exceeded the catch limits during 1997 being merely a pretext to conceal the genuine reasons for the distribution. Even if that were so, it would not be possible to invoke the absence of a statement of reasons since the applicant knew the reasons for the decision. Furthermore, its assertion is belied by the facts. We need only turn to ICCAT Recommendation 98-5 which states that, for 1999, the Community was allocated 20 165 tonnes of bluefin tuna.B - The subsidiary pleas in law(a) Discrimination between Member States47. The Italian Republic maintains in its application that the sole aim of the exceptional distribution made for 1999 was to treat the Member States differently, without taking into account the principles and rules of Community law and, in particular, Article 8(4) of Regulation No 3760/92.48. There is one fact which the applicant has not denied at any time, namely that during the 1997 fishing season it exceeded the catch limits allocated to it by 2 666 tonnes. Accordingly, and having regard to the observations I have made above concerning the effects of the Community becoming a member of ICCAT, the criterion for internal distribution chosen by the Council and the scope of the principle of relative stability, I am inclined to think that what would actually have been discriminatory would have been the opposite course of action: failure to take into account, for the distribution, the excess catches landed by several Member States, not only Italy.In the context of international efforts to conserve and manage Atlantic tuna, and in fulfilment of valid obligations, the Community had its fishing quota reduced for 1999 owing to the fact that several of the Member States had exceeded their catch limits during 1997. Failure to take account, when distributing that quota within the Community, of the excess catches and to deduct them from the Member States responsible would amount not only to discrimination against the Member States which had remained within the set limits but also to infringement of the principle of relative stability, which, as I have already pointed out, requires that regions whose populations depend on fishing may continue to exercise that economic activity in accordance with existing resources.(b) Retroactive effect of the reductions made in the 1999 fishing quotas owing to excess catches during 199749. The applicant questions whether the reduction made in the 1999 quotas owing to the excess catches landed during 1997 is lawful, and does so on the basis of four arguments: (a) sanctions for exceeding catch limits imply that the offending Member State bears individual responsibility, and they could not therefore be the subject of the negotiations provided for in Regulation No 65/98, which refers to the actual quotas allocated on a consistent basis to the Member States; (b) in any event, negotiations relating to the reduction of quotas cannot be conducted without the State concerned having the opportunity to defend itself; (c) ICCAT Recommendation No 96-14 regarding over-exploitation during 1997 provides that the amount of the excess is to be deducted in the following season (1998), so it is incorrect to do so for the 1999 season; and (d) the Italian Republic joined ICCAT only a few days after the abovementioned recommendation came into force, which means that it cannot be penalised for exceeding the catch limits during 1997.50. The third of the above arguments is based on a false premiss. The applicant forgets that ICCAT Recommendation 96-14 was supplemented by the recommendation adopted in Santiago de Compostela in November 1998, according to which the application of a reduction made for exceeding the quota during one season may be deferred to a management period after the one immediately following the period in which the limit had been exceeded if, at the time the limits are fixed, complete data relating to the catches for that period are not available.51. The reply to the first two arguments must not overlook the fact that when the Community became a party to the Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic tunas, it was subrogated to the position of those of its Member States that already belonged to that international organisation and which, at the same time, transferred to it the responsibility for acting for them within ICCAT. This finding is an unavoidable consequence of the provisions of the second indent of Article 2, Article 3(2), and Article 11 et seq. of the Treaty on European Union, which impose the requirement of a common foreign policy and, more particularly, of the provisions of Article 3 EC (Article 3 of the EC Treaty before amendment) which, in paragraph (e), requires the adoption of a common policy in the spheres of agriculture and fisheries.52. Once it had become a party to the Convention, the Community was fully entitled to negotiate the allocation of the fishing quota available to it, and also to discuss all the relevant parameters, including over-exploitation by some of its Member States before the accession of the Community.53. Regulation No 65/98 authorised the European Commission to negotiate within ICCAT the revision of catch figures for Member States without any limitation and, if necessary, to make a later adjustment to the intra-Community distribution. I have no doubt that, for that purpose, it was essential to weigh up all the relevant information and circumstances, amongst them those relating to over-exploitation and the corresponding deductions made in application of recommendations to which no Member State of the Community - nor Italy, when it joined ICCAT - made any objection at the time.54. In such a situation there is no chance at all that any Member State will be left defenceless, because, in the negotiations, the Community defends the Community interests which, as far as the common agricultural policy is concerned, are also those of each of its members.55. The last of the arguments raised by the Italian Republic against Article 2(2) in conjunction with the first table of the Annex to the Regulation also starts from a false premiss in so far as it treats the reduction in fishing quotas provided for in Recommendation 96-14 as a sanction.56. A sanction, whether penal or administrative, is a legal device whose fundamental objective is to punish - and generally and specifically to discourage - conduct characterised as reprehensible in the relevant legal instrument.Since the reprehensible conduct is likely to alter the situation, the sanction in the strict sense may be accompanied by additional measures - to make amends and restitution - aimed at restoring the situation which prevailed before the transgression was committed; but such measures are not in the nature of a sanction.57. If we read carefully the text of Point 2 of ICCAT Recommendation 96-14 and also bear in mind the context in which it was adopted, it is clear that it does not establish a sanction for Member States whose catches exceed their fishing quotas.ICCAT's objective is the conservation and management of Atlantic tuna, through the cooperation of the parties in maintaining tuna stocks at levels which allow sustained maximum catches. In pursuit of that objective, where there is over-exploitation it has the power to adopt binding recommendations to limit catches and distribute them between the States which have tuna-fishing fleets. If one of them exceeds the limit, it upsets the balance to the detriment of the others and it therefore becomes necessary, in order to achieve the proposed aims, to restore that balance. Stability is restored by deducting from the quota of the offending State the amount by which it has exceeded the limit. That is the meaning and scope which should be attributed to the measure adopted in Point 2 of ICCAT Recommendation 96-14.58. No sanction is imposed and, consequently, it is not appropriate to seek to rely on the principle that sanctions must not be applied retroactively. Convincing proof that it is not a punishment is to be found in point 3 of the same recommendation, where provision is made for other measures which could indeed be of that nature, in so far as they seek not to compensate for the damage but rather to punish the offender (by reducing the quota by more than the excess and imposing measures restricting trade).59. Even if the applicant's argument were accepted and the measure in question were acknowledged to be a sanction, it could not be inferred that a deduction from the Italian Republic's quota for 1999 of the quantities by which it had exceeded its quota during 1997 constituted an infringement of the principle which prohibits the retroactive application of sanctions.60. It should be pointed out that Recommendation 96-14 entered into force two days before Italy joined ICCAT, so it is not possible to speak of retroactive application on a legislative level. When Italy joined the organisation, the recommendation was already a legal reality and, more significantly, although Italy knew of its existence, it did not raise any objections to it during the accession procedure.61. Nor is there any retroactive effect in respect of the facts, as the applicant claims when it complains that the recommendation was applied to catches landed before Italy became a member of ICCAT. That view disregards the substance of the transgression with which it is charged. It is, by its very nature, an infringement which is committed only when the fishing limits allocated have been exceeded and which, from that moment, becomes persistent if the catches continue.62. The Italian Republic, even before it became a member of ICCAT, had undertaken not to exceed the bluefin fishing levels indicated in Recommendation 94-11, since that provision was adopted by the General Fisheries Council for the Mediterranean, to which it belonged, in its Resolution 95/1.Consequently, for the 1997 season the applicant undertook not to exceed the level of catches landed in 1993 or 1994 (whichever was the higher). It is unimportant how binding that undertaking was since the crucial point is that, when Italy joined ICCAT without expressing any reservations, it became an obligation. As from 6 August 1997 Italy was legally bound to ensure that its catches for that year - whether landed before or after its accession - did not exceed the threshold indicated, in the knowledge that, if it did not comply, the amount of the excess could be deducted from its quota for the following year.Therefore, it is not possible to allege, on the basis of that argument, infringement of the principle that sanctions must not have retroactive effect, which, in accordance with the principle of legal certainty, requires that nobody should be subjected, after the event, to an unexpected classification of action which, at the time it was taken, was not described as sanctionable. Italy knew, when it acceded to the International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas, that it ought not to exceed a specific threshold and that, if it did so, Recommendation 96-14 could be applied to it.63. In view of the foregoing, none of the infringements which the Italian Republic attributes to Article 2 of the Regulation and the table in its Annex relating to bluefin tuna has taken place and this action for annulment should therefore be dismissed.VI - Costs64. The dismissal of the action brought by the Italian Republic means that, under the first paragraph of Article 69(2) of the Rules of Procedure, that State should be ordered to pay the costs.VII - Conclusion65. In the light of the foregoing considerations, I suggest that the Court of Justice dismiss the action for annulment brought by the Italian Republic against Article 2, and the table in the Annex relating to bluefin tuna, of Council Regulation (EC) No 49/1999 of 18 December 1998 fixing, for certain stocks of highly migratory fish, the total allowable catches for 1999, their distribution in quotas to Member States and certain conditions under which they may be fished, and order the applicant to pay the costs.