More than twice as much fish taken as reported
Explosive fisheries research paper reveals more than twice as much fish taken as reported
Auckland, 16 May 2016 – Greenpeace is calling for an independent investigation of the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) in light of an explosive academic report released today, which finds that the quantity of fish caught in New Zealand is more than twice what is officially recorded.
The University of
Auckland report also releases evidence that suggests MPI has
been deliberately suppressing this information.
The
greatest proportion of this previously unaccounted for sea
life is made up of unreported industrial catch and fish
discards dumped by commercial fishing operators.
The
Executive Director of Greenpeace New Zealand, Russel Norman,
calls the paper “explosive”.
“It looks like the
Ministry charged with looking after our oceans, have instead
been looking after the fishing industry - it’s completely
shocking” he says. “New Zealand’s industrial fishing
companies have been underreporting the number of fish they
have been taking for years, and the evidence suggests the
MPI has been covering for them.”
The paper, called
Reconstruction of Marine Fisheries Catches for New
Zealand (1950-2010), draws on official records,
interviews, literature, and data from a wide range of
industry experts and personnel, to paint a damning picture
of captured officials running interference for dishonest
greedy fishing companies.
“The report explains why average Kiwis are struggling to catch a fish for the dinner table, and demonstrates why they don’t trust fishing companies,” says Norman. “These fish belong to all of us. The idea that almost every second fish is either stolen or biffed back into the sea dead as waste, goes against everything New Zealanders believe in.”
Of the total catch from foreign and New Zealand flagged vessels, commercial discards were estimated to be as high as 37.4% of fish caught. Unreported landings from the industrial sectors made up 18.3%.
“That means nearly twenty percent of all fish caught are stolen and over a third are thrown back. The waste is mind boggling,” says Norman.
One fisheries’ insider quoted in the report confirms this.
They say: “Anything we don’t want goes over the side. A lot of the inshore boats I have been on just don’t even record what they throw over the side. I’ve worked on a lot of bottom longliners and they have magic hooks, only ever catch snapper.”
Although there have been recent attempts to
increase compliance, an unnamed compliance officer quoted in
the report says, “if you don’t look for problems, you
won’t find them.”
The officer goes on to suggest that
the profits of misreporting outweigh the penalties of being
caught, saying: “Penalties are viewed by many in the
industry, particularly the foreign charter sector, as merely
a cost of business.”
The Auckland University report also indicates that when evidence has been delivered to MPI in the past, they have either sat on it or, even worse according to Greenpeace’s Norman, buried it. An MPI investigation quoted in the report acknowledges the ministry is relying on, “misleading and incorrect data to sustain our fisheries”.
Although this particular investigation outlines compelling visual evidence of serious offending, rather than pushing for prosecution, it warns of the potential PR disaster for both MPI and the New Zealand fishing industry should the information ever find it’s way to YouTube.
The MPI investigation quoted in this research says: “The sight of large perfectly good fish being systematically discarded in such large quantities could have a huge negative effect, as it could easily stir up an emotive backlash from not only the New Zealand public, but from international quarters as well.”
Then comes the admission that MPI have chosen not to act on dumping and discarding.
The excerpt from the MPI investigation states: “This combined with the fact that we have known about these dumpings/discarding issues for many years and would appear to have done little to combat it would be very difficult to explain and be unpleasant at best,” the investigations reads.
Greenpeace’s Norman says this sort of information is “damning”.
“A government ministry sitting on something so compelling appears to be evidence of a deliberate cover-up,” he says. “Fisheries has always been highly political, and perhaps never more so than now.”
The University of Auckland’s report also reveals a situation where multiple vulnerable Hector’s dolphins were caught, and only one reported. This follows on from allegations that surfaced just last Friday, in a study by German conservation organisation, NABU International, that revealed a critically endangered Maui dolphin catch cover-up by MPI. Norman says Greenpeace is demanding an independent investigation into the government department.
“Not only has the catch been more than double what has been recorded, but it appears that MPI have known and kept it quiet,” he says. “MPI must now release any visual evidence they have hidden, and let all New Zealanders see what is going on out at sea. ”
ENDS