April 14, 2016 โ SEAFOOD NEWS โ Gov. Ralph DLG Torres said Monday he wants to โget as much as we canโ from a proposed deal by Hawaii longliners to buy half of the CNMIโs tuna fishing quota for a couple of hundred thousand dollars per year, allowing them to fish past their annual catch limits if exhausted.
The Hawaii Longline Association wrote to Torres in February and offered a three-year dealโwith $200,000 paid out each yearโto allow their fishing vessels to catch up to 1,000 metric tons of bigeye tuna โagainst the CNMI catch limit,โ Saipan Tribune learned. The offer is made on the expectation that Hawaii longliners would exhaust their own catch quota, and similar agreements with the CNMI have been made in the last several years.
The offered payment is not tied down to whether the longliners actually end up using the CNMI quota, Saipan Tribune learned, and the $200,000 would be paid without regard the amount of catch HLA has in any given year.
โI am trying to get as much as we can,โ Torres said on Monday, โby meeting with our stakeholders in Hawaii and utilizing what we have here and seeing what we gave last year and what are giving up in the years coming.โ Torres will be in Hawaii for three days and flew out yesterday.
Asked if he has received any information whether the offer was a โlowball,โ Torres said the CNMIโs neighboring islands asked for $1 million โand that was shot down right away.โ
โAs much as we want a million dollars we will get as much as we canโ so โthat the industry continue to grow,โ Torres said.
Still, an industry source from a neighboring island said the $200,000 price was โnot enough.โ
Using their formula to calculate market value of tons per yen or dollar, the source estimated a market value for the CNMIโs 1,000 metric tons at between $887,280 to $1.2 million.
The CNMI is allotted 1,000 metric tons for big eye tuna as part of regulations in for fishing in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean as managed by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS).
Office of the Governor spokesman Ivan Blanco earlier said that the CNMI is โactively reviewing available options including comparable market values from nearby island countries before an acceptance of the offer will be made.โ
Department of Lands and Natural Resource Secretary Richard Seman, for his part, said they always do and hope for money but at the same time, โwe want to be reasonable and extend our assistance to the Hawaii Longline Fishery Association who had been cut short by the overall internationalโ regulations.
Asked if he thought the offer was market value or โa fair price,โ Seman said it was not so much market value as โit is not based on what they catch.โ
โThey are just assuming that they catch that amount of quota. If they donโt catch anything, it is their loss,โ he told reporters Monday.
Seman said the United States has been in the โforefront of complianceโ under the rules that Western Central Pacific Fisheries Commission has set up but it was โsad that [the U.S.] gets kind of shortchanged at the end of the day when it comes down to allocationโ of fishing quota.
Seman said U.S. longliners are now using โits own territoriesโ quotaโ but added they are not going out and seeking other national quotas as compared to other longliners from China who are buying out some of Japanโs quota.
This story originally appeared on Seafoodnews.com, a subscription site. It is reprinted with permission.