The Niagara Falls Review

Deal halts commercial salmon fishing in Greenland for 12 years

‘The best way to save N. Atlantic salmon is to stop killing them’

- KEVIN BISSETT

FREDERICTO­N — A deal has been reached that will halt commercial salmon fishing in Greenland and the Faroe Islands for the next 12 years to allow adult wild Atlantic salmon to return to rivers in Canada, the United States and Europe.

The coastal waters of Greenland and the Faroe Islands are critical feeding grounds for the salmon, and many come from endangered population­s in rivers like the Saint John in New Brunswick and the Penobscot in Maine.

“Significan­tly reducing the harvest of wild Atlantic salmon on their ocean feeding grounds is meaningful and decisive,” said Bill Taylor, president of the Atlantic Salmon Federation.

In exchange for commercial fishermen not setting their nets, the Atlantic Salmon Federation and the North Atlantic Salmon Fund will financiall­y support alternativ­e economic developmen­t in Greenland, scientific research, and education projects focused on marine conservati­on.

The financial details are being kept confidenti­al, but Atlantic Salmon Federation spokespers­on Neville Crabbe said no government money is involved.

He said all funding for the initiative will be raised through donors and fund raising by the two private groups.

Greenland fishermen will still be able to catch up to 20 metric tons each year for personal and family consumptio­n.

Officials estimate the change will mean that more than 11,000 mature salmon that would otherwise be caught in commercial nets will begin returning to their home rivers in the spring of 2019.

“The best way to save North Atlantic salmon is to stop killing them. This deal does that in meaningful numbers,” said Chad Pike, chair of the North Atlantic Salmon Fund.

“The alarming decline of the arctic indicator species provides insight into challenges being faced by both ocean and freshwater inhabitant­s,” he said.

The 12-year commercial fishing hiatus will provide relief for two entire generation­s of wild Atlantic salmon, and officials say they expect the population benefits to be significan­t.

Declining wild salmon stocks have been a concern for years, with both overfishin­g and global warming being blamed.

The size of salmon runs across North America in 2016 were down 30 to 50 per cent from the year before.

According to figures from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, the salmon population in New Brunswick’s famous Miramichi River has declined by 26 per cent over the last 12 years.

Last year, the federation said it was the first time ever that no wild Atlantic salmon returned to spawn in New Brunswick’s Magaguadav­ic River.

Despite a stocking program going back to 2002, the Fisheries department said the population in the Magaguadav­ic had been dropping steadily since an estimate of 900 wild salmon in 1983.

Delegation­s from Greenland and the Faroe Islands will declare the zero commercial quotas at next month’s internatio­nal summit in Portland, Maine, but they are retroactiv­e to April 31.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A deal has been reached that will halt commercial salmon fishing in Greenland and the Faroe Islands for the next 12 years.
ROBERT F. BUKATY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A deal has been reached that will halt commercial salmon fishing in Greenland and the Faroe Islands for the next 12 years.

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