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The usual suspects

Posted by Casson on Dec 18, 2009 in Fishing and Farming, News and Announcements
Same old same old

Same old same old

Sometimes when I sit down to write one of these posts, I get a sort of melancholy déjà vu.  So many of the problems that plague our oceans stem from the same root causes; it’s almost like writing the same article over and over again.  Avarice, financial myopia, cultural misunderstandings, and apathetic complacency are frustratingly ubiquitous when we try to decipher and disassemble the tangled, parasitic relationship that we’ve developed with our oceans.

It also seems like every time we start digging into ocean conservation issues anywhere on the planet, we find ourselves up against the same culprits: a small clique of nations that have taken to fishing in a serious way.  I suppose this is logical given the total consumption (as well as the per capita consumption) of seafood in these particular countries: they are the source of a tremendous share of the world’s seafood demand, and thus have a vested interest in access the supply freely and without interference from other parties.  Still, one would think that their respective decision makers would understand that in order to have fish tomorrow, we have to take proper care of the fish today…. right?

Anyhow, onto the matter at hand.

Perks of the job

Perks of the job

Last week, the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC), a body which oversees the regulations governing tuna fishing throughout much of the world’s largest ocean, came together in Tahiti for its annual meeting.  Representatives from over a dozen countries flew to Papeete in order to discuss the worrying state of Pacific tunas, concentrating especially on skipjack and bigeye.

There was a great hope that much could be achieved at this meeting.  Scores of artisanal fishermen teamed up with local and international NGOs in any number of demonstrations to drive home the fact that these animals are in need of protection.  The Pacific is the last ocean with bigeye tuna populations anywhere near healthy levels, and it was made clear that unless stringent and effective quotas are implemented — in conjunction with new closures and off-limits areas — we may lose this stock as well.

Catch us if you can

Catch us if you can

As I discussed in a previous series of posts, a great deal of the Pacific bigeye stock is taken as bycatch by seiners that are seeking skipjack tuna.  In the Western and Central Pacific, these seiners tend to operate in what are known as “donut holes” or “high seas pockets”: areas of ocean that are surrounded by the territorial waters of various countries but are just beyond the 200-mile exclusive economic zone of any of them.  Seining was banned in two of the four major pockets in the Pacific Ocean during the WCPFC meeting in 2008, and most of the Pacific island nations were hoping to seal the deal and protect the remaining two this year.

Alas.  Enter the usual suspects.

There are three key states that have a long-standing track record of blocking this kind of progress in the Pacific: South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan.  These countries tend to work as a bloc to forestall regulatory measures that would preclude their fleets from plundering the Pacific at will.  Lamentably, this meeting proved to be no exception.

On my own

On my own

A group of small island states proposed a 50% reduction in the overall bigeye tuna quota.  South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan, joined by China and the Philippines, opposed the measure — even though their own scientists advised them to do otherwise.  In the face of this obstinacy, the proposal never had a chance.  It died horribly right there in the room and left the Pacific bigeye populations unprotected.

To add insult to injury, I should note that it was actually the Japanese that raised the issue about tuna welfare in the first place.  The Japanese delegation went on record early in the meeting stating that no other tuna species can be allowed to decline to the point of meeting the CITES Appendix I criteria, as the northern bluefin does (this was, by the way, the first time that the Japanese government has admitted that northern bluefin qualifies for CITES protection.)  Japan also expressed concern over the state of sharks, especially hammerheads, in the Pacific.  This is good news, right?  The largest per capita seafood consumer in the world standing up for the oceans?

Well, a couple of days later, they reversed their stance, blocked all precautionary proposals and quota reductions, and ensured that bigeye and yellowfin tuna continue on the fast track to endangered species land.  Thanks guys.

It's pronounced "POOR-bee-gle"

Yeah... like an impoverished puppy

To be fair, there’s really no room for any kind of flag-waving on my part.  The US delegation actually arrived at the meeting planning to oppose these precautionary measures as well.  In the end they were persuaded to abstain from the vote, but still, hardly a pride-inducing course of action.

The presence of a new and woefully inexperienced chairman did not help matters.  At one point, when one of the delegations raised concerns about the state of porbeagle sharks in the Pacific, the chairman was quoted as saying, “What?  What’s a pork barrel shark?”

Yeah.  I’m not kidding.

Catch of the day

Catch of the day

In the end, it pretty much all fell apart.  Despite strong efforts from France, Australia, numerous Pacific island nations, Greenpeace, and several local environmental groups, the meeting ended not with a bang, but with a whimper.  Two enormous high seas pockets remain open to purse seiners that regularly take large quantities of juvenile bigeye.  Sharks and tuna are still without succor, their diminishing populations at the mercy of relentless longliners.

Still… there’s gotta be a silver lining here somewhere.  Hang on, I’ll find something…

Oh, yeah.  Here we go.

This miserable outcome has upset many of these Pacific island states to no end.  In fact, it may lead renegotiation of access agreements by these tiny countries: if the WCPFC can’t effectively protect these delicate fisheries, the Pacific island governments may just have to go it alone.  They’re even talking about withdrawing from the Commission if it can’t serve it’s purpose, and relying on bilateral negotiation in an attempt to keep these foreign fleets out of their waters.

Preach on

Preach on

Wait a minute — that’s it?  That’s the silver lining?  We’re finding our solace in the breakdown of an attempted multinational management body in favor of a clutch of one-off two-party agreements of dubious strength and effectiveness?  In an emergency backpedaling in the face of failure?  In the inability of key stakeholder countries to see the writing on the wall and to take the simple, logical action necessary to protect their economy, environment, and children?

Wow.  Whatever’s happening in Copenhagen right now must be contagious.

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Skipjack, seiners, and the sea – Week 1: The search

Posted by Casson on Nov 16, 2009 in Fishing and Farming, News and Announcements
Papeete Harbor

Under a Tahitian cloud

This article continues from a previous post.

After enduring a few unfortunate customs snags and transit delays, I finally joined the crew of the Esperanza in Papeete, the commercial center of Tahiti and the capital of French Polynesia, on Saturday, November 7th.

Tahiti is not like the other parts of the Pacific that I’ve visited.  First of all, it’s wealthy.  Its political connections to France (French Polynesia is still dependent territory under French rule) and the resulting subsidies have brought a tremendous amount of money to the island.  As such, being a tourist in Tahiti is not cheap.  I was dropping between eight and ten dollars for a beer.

Still, Papeete is a nice place: the harbor and streets are festooned with ivory tiare flowers, and an incomprehensibly verdant mountain tears its way skyward a stone’s throw from the center of town, providing a heart-melting south Pacific backdrop.

Presidential support is always welcome

Capt. Habib and President Timaru - reunited

The President of French Polynesia, the Honorable Oscar Timaru, stopped by to say hello and to voice his support for Greenpeace and for the campaign.  President Timaru and Captain Madeline Habib, the skipper of the Esperanza, actually spent some time working together on a nuclear campaign in Moruroa in 1995.

After President Timaru left, the Esperanza steamed out of Papeete harbor.  The next few days were spent heading north around the western edge of the Tuamotu Archipelago and then northeast towards the Marquesas Islands.

We’ve now been at sea for one week, and life on board is casual and relaxed.  The crew is experienced and capable, and the captain runs this ship with a steady hand and a positive attitude.

Crusty old FAD from yesteryear

A FAD from yesteryear

On Friday, November 13, we encountered our first FAD.  It was floating in the open sea southwest of the Marquesas, and appeared to be derelict – there was no radio transmitter attached to it, nor were there any markings to suggest ownership or origin.   The FAD itself was basically a makeshift bamboo raft fixed to a nylon rope, which vanished into the depths (it was presumably attached a weight of some kind).  A thick crust of gooseneck barnacles encased the entire FAD; it had clearly been in the water for some time.

The camera team was deployed to investigate and catalog the FAD and the ecosystem that had developed around it.  We counted at least eight different species of fish schooling around it, and that was only what were were able to positively identify.  Seiners are only after one of those species — skipjack tuna.  The other seven would all end up dead, tossed over the side as bycatch.

Wrong place, right time

Wrong place, right time

The FAD had done its job — it had become a sort of floating reef, attracting numerous forage fish as well as several different types of predatory animals.  A few oceanic white-tip sharks haunted the area, skirting the edges in search of an easy meal.  If this FAD were found and fished by a purse seiner, those sharks and everything else around the raft would be caught in the net and killed.

As we continue traveling north towards the Equator, we’ll move into a latitudinal band known as the Doldrums, an area between 5° N and 5°S known for having weak currents and lackluster wind.  This is a preferred target area for skipjack seiners, as they are able to drop FADs with little worry of the devices being carried away by a restless ocean.

More updates as we move onward.

This article continues in a subsequent post.

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