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Nations Promise Billions For Sustainable Oceans At Palau Conference

April 14, 2022 โ€” Nations and philanthropic organizations pledged to redouble their efforts to conserve the worldโ€™s oceans this week at the seventh Our Ocean conference in Palau.

The conference spanned two days of speeches, panels and sessions about sustainable fisheries, Indigenous community-led conservation and other topics related to oceans.

Leaders and representatives of nonprofit groups made promises to better address climate change and related issues as advocates pressed for more urgent action.

On Wednesday in Palau, the European Union promised to back 44 ocean-related commitments worth more than $1 billion. The U.S. government announced over 100 commitments worth $2.7 billion, including 16 new sustainable fisheries initiatives worth at least $120 million and a new tool for assessing marine-protected areas.

Read the full story at Honolulu Civil Beat

 

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

California is cracking down to prevent illegal fishing off the coast

September 28, 2016 โ€” California is embarking on a new effort to shield ocean waters from overfishing.

Law-enforcement officials have embraced a statewide ticketing system aimed at poachers and unwitting anglers who illegally catch bass, yellowtail, lobsters and other types of marine life within these zones, which are commonly called MPAs.

Californiaโ€™s continued push to police its network of underwater state parks comes as government officials and scientific leaders from around the world gathered in Washington, D.C., last week for a conference on a wide range of marine issues, including climate change, pollution and restoring diversity of sea life.

Initially spearheaded by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in 2014, the Our Ocean conference has since drawn commitments to expand or form new preservation zones in sensitive ocean habitats from more than a dozen countries, including Morocco, Thailand and Canada, as well as the European Union and the United Kingdom. Most recently, the Obama administration expanded the Papahฤnaumokuฤkea Marine National Monument off the coast of Hawaii โ€” now the worldโ€™s largest marine protected area.

Read the full story at the Los Angeles Times

National monument in waters off Cape Cod causes rift

September 16, 2016 โ€” The establishment of the first marine national monument in the Atlantic Ocean drew mixed reactions Thursday, with environmental groups hailing the new protections that some New England fishermen denounced as a threat to their livelihood.

The designation bans commercial fishing in an expansive ecosystem off Cape Cod in a concerted effort to protect the area from the impact of climate change, President Obama said as he announced the designation at the Our Ocean Conference in Washington, D.C.

But fishermen said the area should remain open, asserting that decades of commercial fishing have not damaged the ecosystem. They accused the Obama administration of ignoring their recommendations for compromise measures.

One proposal would have allowed fishing in the area as far down as 450 meters and kept the area open to red crab fishing, said Grant Moore, president of the Atlantic Offshore Lobstermenโ€™s Association. An average of 800,000 pounds of lobster are taken from the monument area every year, he said.

Denny Colbert, who runs Trebloc Seafood in Plymouth with his brother, said he sends two vessels to the area to catch lobster and Jonah crabs.

โ€œItโ€™s unbelievable,โ€ he said. โ€œIโ€™m going to have to find another place to go.โ€

Bill Palombo, president of Palombo Fishing Corp. in Newport, R.I., said lobster and red crab are plentiful in the area.

โ€œItโ€™s going to be devastating for us,โ€ said Palombo.

The designation prevents access to the main source of red crab in New England, said Beth Casoni, executive director of the Massachusetts Lobstermenโ€™s Association. โ€œThe red crab industry is primarily fished in these canyons,โ€ she said. โ€œI donโ€™t see them going anywhere else. Thatโ€™s where it is.โ€

Read the full story at the Boston Globe

New way to publicly monitor global fishing changes the game

September 16, 2016 โ€” World leaders in ocean conservation and management are gathering in Washington this week for Secretary John Kerryโ€˜s Our Ocean conference โ€” a convening of global policymakers aimed a tackling some of the greatest challenges facing our seas and the wildlife that depend on them. Iโ€™m especially excited about this yearโ€™s meeting because it will mark the moment when we can truly begin a new era in fisheries management thanks to a groundbreaking new digital tool that will allow governments and citizens around the world to improve management to bring back fishery abundance and strengthen food security.

Early Thursday morning, we made Global Fishing Watch available to the public. Now for the first time ever, anyone with an internet connection can monitor global fishing activity, in near real-time, for free. Oceana partnered with SkyTruth and Google to produce a public platform that uses satellite data, cloud computing and machine learning to identify fishing activity all over the world and provide it to users in an intuitive internet-based interface.

Until today, the only way to really know what fishing vessels were doing was to have eyes physically trained on the ships, or to track vessels one at a time, point-by-point, day by day. That process is now automated by Global Fishing Watch so that anyone can instantly look at the tracks of tens of thousands of vessels, everywhere they fish, at any time over the past five years, within just a few days back from the present. This completely changes the game.

Ships over a certain size are required to use the Automatic Identification System (AIS) to avoid at-sea collisions. This broadcast data is collected by terrestrial and satellite receivers, and Global Fishing Watch analyzes it to locate apparent fishing activity. Now, for the first time, everyone can see where ships are fishing, and when. The applications of this technology to fishery policy and management are numerous. Early testers of Global Fishing Watch have consistently been bringing us new application ideas that even we, the developers, hadnโ€™t imagined.

Read the full story at The Hill

Obama Designates 1st Marine Monument In The Atlantic; Draws Ire of Fishermen

September 15, 2016 โ€” During the Our Ocean conference in Washington, D.C., President Obama announced the creation of the first national marine monument in the Atlantic Ocean.

โ€œWeโ€™re protecting fragile ecosystems off the coast of New England, including pristine underseas canyons and seamounts,โ€ Obama said during his remarks. โ€œWeโ€™re helping make the oceans more resilient to climate change โ€ฆ and weโ€™re doing it in a way that respects the fishing industryโ€™s unique role in New Englandโ€™s economy and history.โ€

Opponents are already challenging the move, calling it an illegal use of presidential authority.

โ€œWe donโ€™t normally create laws in this country by the stroke of an imperial pen,โ€ says Bob Vanasse, a spokesman for the National Coalition for Fishing Communities.

He adds, โ€œThis is not only an end-run around Congress, itโ€™s an end-run around the entire system the Congress created to protect these ocean resources.โ€

Vanasse says the move will seriously hurt the fishing industry: โ€œWe anticipate the offshore lobster industry will be affected to the tune of about $10 million per year. On top of that one of most affected industries is going to be the Atlantic red crab industry. It is going to be very significantly impacted.โ€

Senior administration officials say to mitigate the financial harm, theyโ€™re designating a smaller area than planned, and lobster and red crab fisheries have been given a seven-year grace period before they have to comply.

Jon Williams, president of the Atlantic Red Crab Company in Massachusetts, says his company will survive, but he tells The Associated Press, โ€œItโ€™s a big blow to us.โ€

Read and listen to the full story at NPR

U.S. Seafood Producers to White House: Donโ€™t Harm Fisheries for Ocean Monuments

September 12, 2016 โ€” The following was released by the National Coalition for Fishing Communities:

WASHINGTON โ€” Today, in advance of the โ€œOur Oceansโ€ conference being held later this week at the State Department, the National Coalition for Fishing Communities (NCFC) delivered a letter to the White House calling on the President to refrain from designating new marine monuments under the Antiquities Act. Copies of the letter were also delivered to the offices of Senators representing the states of the signers.

The letter, with over 900 fishing industry signers and supported by 35 fishing organizations that represent the majority of domestic seafood harvesters, instead urges the President to conserve marine resources through the federal fisheries management process established by the bipartisan Magnuson-Stevens Fisheries Management Act (MSA).

โ€œThe federal fisheries management process is among the most effective systems for managing living marine resources in the world,โ€ the letter states. โ€œThe misuse of the Antiquities Act to create a marine monument is a repudiation of past and ongoing efforts to make Magnuson-Stevens management even more effective.โ€

The NCFC members join an ever-growing list of fishing organizations and individuals opposing new ocean monuments via use of the Antiquities Act. The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, the Council Coordination Committee, and over two dozen individual fish and seafood industry trade organizations have previously written to the White House asking for the MSA continue to guide fisheries management.

Mayors from major East and West coast ports have previously expressed their concerns with monument designations in letters to the White House. NCFC members have also spoke out in opposition to designating a monument off the coast of New England, which would hurt the valuable red crab, swordfish, tuna, and offshore lobster fisheries.

Todayโ€™s letter was signed by the following fishing organizations:

  • Alaska Bering Sea Crabbers
  • American Scallop Association
  • American Albacore Fisheries Association
  • At-Sea Processors Association
  • Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Association
  • Atlantic Offshore Lobstermenโ€™s Association
  • California Fisheries and Seafood Institute
  • California Lobster & Trap Fishermenโ€™s Association
  • California Sea Urchin Commission
  • California Wetfish Producers Association
  • Coalition of Coastal Fisheries
  • Coos Bay Trawlers
  • Directed Sustainable Fisheries
  • Fisheries Survival Fund
  • Fishermenโ€™s Dock Co-Op
  • Garden State Seafood Association
  • Golden King Crab Coalition
  • Groundfish Forum
  • Hawaii Longline Association
  • Long Island Commercial Fishing Association
  • Midwater Trawlers Cooperative
  • National Fisheries Institute
  • North Carolina Fisheries Association
  • Oregon Trawl Commission
  • Organized Fishermen of Florida
  • Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermenโ€™s Associations
  • Pacific Seafood Processors Association
  • Pacific Whiting Conservation Cooperative
  • Southeastern Fisheries Association
  • Sustainable Fisheries Coalition
  • United Catcher Boats
  • Ventura County Commercial Fishermenโ€™s Association
  • Washington Trollers Association
  • West Coast Seafood Processors Association
  • Western Fishboat Owners Association

Read the letter here

National Marine Monument off New England coast?

September 12, 2016 โ€” The third installment of the Our Ocean forum will convene in Washington, D.C., this week and the betting window is open on whether the Obama administration will use the event to announce the designation of new National Marine Monuments.

No one โ€” neither conservationists nor fishing stakeholders โ€” claims to know exactly what will happen when the two-day, international event opens Thursday. But it has not escaped anyoneโ€™s attention that the Obama administration has used the same forum in the past to make similar announcements.

[In March], in a victory for fishing stakeholders, the White Houseโ€™s Council on Environmental Quality removed Cashes Ledge, which sits about 80 miles off of Gloucester, from consideration as a possible site for a new National Marine Monument.

The Obama administrationโ€™s decision not to use the Antiquities Act to designate any portion of Cashes Ledge as a monument validated fishing stakeholders and others who characterized the proposal โ€” which originated with the Conservation Law Foundation, the Natural Resources Defense Council and Pew Charitable Trusts โ€” as an end-run around the existing fisheries management system and wholly unnecessary given the existing protections already afforded the area.

Cashes Ledge currently is closed to commercial fishing.

In the wake of that defeat, conservationists redoubled their lobbying efforts, urging Obama to invoke the 1906 Antiquities Act to unilaterally designate a number of potential sites, including canyons and seamounts off southern New England and off the coast of Monterey, California, as Maritime National Monuments.

โ€œAll eyes are on the canyons and seamounts,โ€ said Jackie Odell, executive director of the Gloucester-based Northeast Seafood Coalition.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Times

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