25 May 2016
Aotearoa Fisheries supports transparency on the water
Aotearoa Fisheries supports the position of Primary Industries Minister, Nathan Guy, to speed up the rollout of
monitoring equipment on commercial fishing vessels, as do its fishers.
“We were among the first companies to step up our efforts to bringing greater transparency to the inshore fleet. Last
year we committed to having 100% of our inshore trawl fleet with Vessel Monitoring Systems and electronic monitoring
(cameras) on board, and we’re pleased to announce that we’re almost there,” says Aotearoa Fisheries CEO, Carl
Carrington.
“In our largest fishery, SNA1, we have 100% coverage, and this is something that is wholeheartedly supported, in fact it
was initiated by fishers. They are professionals who do their job with pride, and are pleased with the transparency of
their practices that this provides, exactly because it shows they have nothing to hide,” he says.
Aotearoa Fisheries is also supportive of the fact that MPI has the mandate under current regulations to enforce
penalties for transgressions caught on camera, and expects it to act on any illegal activity.
For Aotearoa Fisheries and the commercial fishing sector as a whole knowing where fish are being caught is an integral
part of sustainable fisheries management and the transparency that monitoring equipment provides enables it to build
public confidence, and its fishers to show the care they take in what they do.
“We are absolutely committed to a sustainably managed fishery. It makes no sense for us to be doing anything on the
water that compromises the long term health of the fish stocks. So having this technology on the boats gives everybody
confidence that what is happening, is what we say is happening,” says Mr Carrington.
However, Aotearoa Fisheries believes that electronic monitoring is only one part of the solution. It is always looking
at ways it can improve what it does to ensure overall sustainability of commercial fishing under the Quota Management
System. After all, without that the commercial fishing sector would cease to exist and most people wouldn’t be able to
enjoy the delicious, healthy product from our pristine coastal waters.
“We acknowledge that there are parts of the Quota Management System that need improving and we’re more than happy to be
part of ongoing discussions on improvements,” he says.
ENDS