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US, others make commitments for sustainability at Our Ocean

November 8, 2018 โ€” At the Our Ocean 2018 conference held last week in Indonesia, the United States pledged its support for 15 initiatives that would affect fishing communities across the globe.

In addition, former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met with Indonesian Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti during the two-day conference in Bali to reaffirm their nationsโ€™ commitment to encourage sustainable fisheries management worldwide.

Kerry, who also served as a conference presenter, commended Indonesia for its role in combating illegal fishing.

โ€œI believe there is big crime committed in relation to [illegal, unreported and unregulated] fishing and this should be addressed by countries around the world,โ€ he said. โ€œTo ensure sustainability, one of the ways is to maintain the volume of catch, making sure there is no overfishing.โ€

Another way the U.S. will work to combat illegal fishing is by working with The Waitt Foundation to hold a February 2019 summit in San Diego, California, U.S.A. with leaders from other countries to identify pilot projects that can be implemented online.

Peter Horn, who heads the Ending Illegal Fishing Project for The Pew Charitable Trusts, said heโ€™s looking forward to the summit.

โ€œWe welcome the broadening of the debate of the governance issues behind current levels of Illegal, Unreported, and Unregulated (IUU) fishing, and its second and third order consequences,โ€ he told SeafoodSource in an email. โ€œIUU fishing is often seen as purely an environmental crime with any absence of compliance with the rules countering it a management issue rather than what it really is: The tip of an iceberg of criminality which is directly linked to maritime safety and security.โ€

Read the full story at Seafood Source

A Coalition of Global Participants Pledge to Protect Five Million Square Miles of Ocean

November 2, 2018 โ€” Global participants in the fifth Our Ocean Conference have pledged the highest amount of funding yet for new initiatives and commitments on the protection of a combined expanse of ocean eight times the size of Alaska.

The event, hosted by the Indonesian government on the island of Bali, generated 287 pledges in bilateral and multilateral agreements between governments, the private sector, civil society organizations, and philanthropic foundations. The pledges were valued at more than $10 billion to protect some 5.4 million square miles of the worldโ€™s oceans, according to Luhut Pandjaitan, Indonesiaโ€™s coordinating minister for maritime affairs.

To date, the Our Ocean Conference has raked in commitments totaling $28 billion and covering 10.2 million square miles of ocean.

โ€œThese numbers are beyond our expectations,โ€ Luhut said in his closing remarks on October 30th. โ€œWe are thankful for your collective contributions and making our ocean healthier and (more) sustainable.โ€

The impacts of illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing and climate change on the worldโ€™s oceans were the key focuses during the two-day conference. Data from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization showed that the value of fish captured illegally was about 26 million tons, or up to $23 billion annually. The worldโ€™s maritime resources are valued at around $24 trillion.

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โ€œIllegal fishing globally still decimates fisheries at an unsustainable pace,โ€ said former United States Secretary of State John Kerry in his speech on October 29th.

โ€œIllegal fishing continues on an unmitigated, unsustainable pace and almost one-third of the worldโ€™s fisheries are still overexploited,โ€ he said. He added that the remainder of fisheries โ€œare either at peak or nearly at peak with more and more people in the middle class, more and more people with money, more and more people demanding fresh fish on their table in their restaurants in their country.โ€

Read the full story at the Pacific Standard

Workshop series aims to boost โ€œharvest strategyโ€ for tuna management

April 23, 2018 โ€” On late February, Fijiโ€™s Ministry of Fisheries and the World Wildlife Fund hosted a two-day regional workshop to create a better understanding among states in the western and central Pacific Ocean of the โ€œharvest strategyโ€ approach to tuna management. About 40 participants from Fiji and across the Pacific region attended.

The event, held in the city of Nadi, was funded by the Global Environment Facilityโ€™s Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction project. The term โ€œareas beyond national jurisdictionโ€ generally refers to the high seas, which lie outside of any countryโ€™s exclusive economic zone. The Global Environment Facility is a grant-making organization formed after the 1992 Rio Earth Summit to address environmental problems around the world. Its members include the World Bank and the FAO as well as many countries. Several business partners are also involved.

Ocean Outcomes, an organization funded by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, helped design the program, and the workshop was also attended by a representative of the Food and Agriculture Organization. It was the seventh in a series of eight workshops, held in locations around the world, including Dakar, Senegal; Bali, Indonesia; and Colombo, Sri Lanka.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

 

American Samoan group to be part of US delegation to WCPFC fishery conference in Bali

December 2, 2015 โ€” American Samoa is being represented at the 12th Regular Session of the Western and Central Pacific Fishery Commission set for Dec. 3-8 in Bali, Indonesia and they will be part of the US government delegation. American Samoa and the other insular areas are considered US Participating Territories of the WCPFC.

Marine and Wildlife Department director Ruth Matagi-Tofiga told Samoa News last week that as Head of Fishery (HOF) for American Samoa, she is heading the territorial delegation, which includes Taulapapa Willie Sword, DMWR chief fishery biologist Dr. Domingo Ochavillo and Tri Marine International chief operating officer Joe Hamby.

Samoa News should point out that Matagi-Tofiga, Sword and Hamby are members of the American Samoa Fishery Task Force. Sword represents Pacific Energy on the task force, which also includes a representative of StarKist.

Additionally, Matagi-Tofiga and Sword also represent American Samoa on the Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council, along with Port Administration director Taimalelagi Dr. Claire Poumele, who is also a member of the Fishery Task Force.

Samoa News understands that among the priorities for Matagi-Tofiga at the meeting in Bali is to improve American Samoaโ€™s economy, improve relationships with other Pacific Island Parties (PIPs), and to build an identity for American Samoa that is distinct from the US as far as fishery management and the American Samoa economy are concerned.

Read the full story at Samoa News

 

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