High Seas Bottom Trawl Controls Welcomed
Wellington – Wednesday 24 April 2008
High Seas Bottom Trawl Controls Welcomed
ECO welcomed the
Government's putting measures in place to implement
the
Interim Measures agreed for bottom fishing on the
High Seas in the South
Pacific.
ECO spokesperson, Barry
Weeber, said while the measures only partially
implement
the interim arrangements they were a major step
forward.
Mr Weeber said the requirement to have an
observer onboard all vessels was an
essential requirement
of the interim measures (Interim Measure 9).
"Without
Ministry of Fisheries observers on board it will be
impossible to
assess the catch of vulnerable species,
like cold water corals and sponges."
Mr Weeber said that
these cold water corals can be hundreds of years old
and
are easily destroyed by bottom fishing nets being
dragged over the sea floor
to catch orange roughy
The
measures to protect vulnerable marine ecosystems were
necessary to meet
the requirements of a UN General
Assembly resolution which was passed in
December
2006.
Mr Weeber said the UNGA resolution required all
parties involved in
negotiating new fisheries agreements
to pass measures to prevent significant
adverse effects
on vulnerable marine ecosystems.
"The history of orange
roughy fishing in New Zealand (and internationally)
has
been to severely over-fish populations and take
corrective too late." Mr
Weeber said it has yet to be
determined whether the orange roughy fisheries on
the
high seas are sustainable and this is one part of the
interim measures
that New Zealand is yet to
implement.
Mr Weeber said the other key requirement
missing in the interim measures was
the need to assess
the impacts on vulnerable marine ecosystem. "We are
aware
the fishing industry are opposing this requirement
but it is an explicit part
of the interim measures and
the UN General Assembly requirements"
Mr Weeber said ECO
understands the Ministry of Fisheries intends to
implement
these requirements as soon as possible.
New
Zealand is the major deepwater fisher in the South Pacific
making up
nearly 90 percent of the effort for orange
roughy and deepwater oreos.
Australia is the other major
player with additional catch from a Chinese
vessels
flagged to Belize.
Mr Weeber said all countries involved
in the South Pacific process have
committed to meeting
the requirements of the interim measures. "At the
recent
meeting in Ecuador in March, Australia and Belize
committed themselves to
implementing these
measures."
ECO will be working with other members of the
Deep Sea Conservation Coalition
to ensure all countries
implement the South Pacific Interim measures.
For further information contact: Barry Weeber 021-738-807.
Note:
1. ECO – the Environment
and Conservation Organisations was established
in
1972
and represents 62 groups with a concern for the environment.
ECO is a
member of Deep Sea Conservation Conservation
Coalition which has promoted
measures to protect high
seas from bottom fishing (see .
2. The Interim
Measures for bottom fishing in the high seas in the
South
Pacific were adopted in April 2007 in Renaca Chile
by the meeting developing a
South Pacific Regional
Fisheries Management Agreement. Since that meeting
there
have been two further meetings which have further fleshed
out the
scientific requirements. The key requirements of
the measures are:
1. Limit bottom fishing effort or
catch in the Area to existing levels
[defined as average
annual levels over the period 1 January 2002 to
31
December 2006] in terms of the number of fishing
vessels and other parameters
that reflect the level of
catch, fishing effort, and fishing capacity.
2 Not
expand bottom fishing activities into new regions of the
Area
where such fishing is not currently occurring.
6.
In respect of areas where vulnerable marine ecosystems are
known to
occur or are likely to occur based on the best
available scientific
information, close such areas to
bottom fishing unless…. conservation and
management
measures have been established to prevent significant
adverse
impacts on vulnerable marine ecosystems and the
long-term sustainability of
deep sea fish
stocks…
6.7. Require that vessels flying their flag
cease bottom fishing activities
within five (5) nautical
miles of any site in the Area where, in the course
of
fishing operations, evidence of vulnerable marine
ecosystems is encountered….
9. Appoint observers
to each vessel flying their flag and undertaking
or
proposing to undertake bottom trawling activities in
the Area and ensure an
appropriate level of observer
coverage on vessels flying their flag and
undertaking
other bottom fishing activities in the Area.
9.10. To
strengthen its control over bottom fishing vessels flying
its flag,
each participant will ensure that all such
vessels operating in the Area be
equipped with an
operational vessel monitoring system no later then
31
December 2007, or earlier if so decided by the flag
State.
Assessment of bottom fishing
11. Assess, on
the basis of the best available scientific
information,
whether individual bottom fishing activities
would have significant adverse
impacts on vulnerable
marine ecosystems, and to ensure that if it is
assessed
that these activities would have significant
adverse impacts, they are managed
to prevent such
impacts, or not authorized to proceed.
3. The South
Pacific measures defined vulnerable marine ecosystems
as
including includes "seamounts, hydrothermal vents,
cold water corals and
sponge fields".
4. The
measures follow on from a requirement of a 2006 UN
General
Assembly Resolution 61/105 (A/61/L.30) on
Sustainable Fisheries adopted on 8
December 2006
which:
OP80. Calls upon States to take action
immediately, individually and through
regional fisheries
management organizations and arrangements, and
consistent
with the precautionary approach and ecosystem
approaches, to sustainably
manage fish stocks and protect
vulnerable marine ecosystems, including
seamounts,
hydrothermal vents and cold water corals, from destructive
fishing
practices, recognizing the immense importance and
value of deep sea ecosystems
and the biodiversity they
contain;
OP83. Calls upon regional fisheries management
organizations or arrangements
with the competence to
regulate bottom fisheries to adopt and
implement
measures, in accordance with the precautionary
approach, ecosystem approaches
and international law, for
their respective regulatory areas as a matter
of
priority, but not later than December 31, 2008:
A.
To assess, on the basis of the best available scientific
information,
whether individual bottom fishing activities
would have significant adverse
impacts on vulnerable
marine ecosystems, and to ensure that if it is
assessed
that these activities would have significant
adverse impacts, they are managed
to prevent such
impacts, or not authorized to proceed.
A.B. To
identify vulnerable marine ecosystems and determine whether
bottom
fishing activities would cause significant adverse
impacts to such ecosystems
and the long-term
sustainability of deep sea fish stocks, inter alia
by
improving scientific research and data collection and
sharing, and through new
and exploratory
fisheries;
A.C. In respect of areas where vulnerable
marine ecosystems, including
seamounts, hydrothermal
vents and cold water corals, are known to occur or
are
likely to occur based on the best available
scientific information, to close
such areas to bottom
fishing and ensure that such activities do not
proceed
unless it has established conservation and
management measures to prevent
significant adverse
impacts on vulnerable marine ecosystems; and
A.D. To
require members of the regional fisheries management
organizations
or arrangements to require vessels flying
their flag to cease bottom fishing
activities in areas
where, in the course of fishing operations,
vulnerable
marine ecosystems are encountered, and to
report the encounter so that
appropriate measures can be
adopted in respect of the relevant site;
OP85 Calls
upon those States participating in negotiations to establish
a
regional fisheries management organization or
arrangement competent to
regulate bottom fisheries to
expedite such negotiations and, by no later than
December
31, 2007, to adopt and implement interim measures consistent
with
paragraph 83 and make these measures publicly
available;
5. "Seamounts" have been defined by the
South Pacific Science Working
Group as any feature with
vertical elevation of at least 100m. This is also
the
definition used in the Ministry of Fisheries draft Strategy
to Address the
Impacts of Fishing on Seamounts, 1999 and
by various reports by NIWA
6. Orange roughy are
long-lived and have a maximum age of 120-130 years.
They
do not mature until they are around 30 years old. They are
caught using
the controversial method of bottom trawling
which also destroys any corals,
sponges and other three
dimensional sea life on the bottom. Some of these
coral
removed have been aged at over 500 years
old.
ends