The Fiji Times

No WTO deal on fisheries subsidies

- By DON WISEMAN ■ DON WISEMAN is a Pacific Senior Journalist with RNZ. The views expressed in this article are his and not of this newspaper.

A FRACTIOUS meeting of world trade ministers in Abu Dhabi ended with little to show for the time and money spent early Saturday morning New Zealand time.

Pacific Island nations were seeking at the WTO ministeria­l meeting to have the government­s of the larger fishing nations stop or reduce the subsidies they pay their fishers.

This did not happen but a spokesman for PANG, the Pacific Network on Globalisat­ion, Adam Wolfenden, said this is a better result than having a substandar­d deal foisted on them, which had been the prospect right to the end.

“It’s not for lack of effort. And I think we’ve seen what was put on the table, the text particular­ly on fisheries subsidies, and that was on offer right up into the last minute, there was still quite a few holes in it that from.”

Wolfenden said from PANG’s perspectiv­e a lot needed to be fixed in that offer for a deal that would fulfill the promises of the negotiatio­ns.

He said the Pacific did a lot of negotiatin­g and really fought for an outcome which would hold the big distant water fishing fleets to account.

They wanted a standstill and eventual reduction in the subsidies, he said.

The United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 14.6 calls for the prohibitio­n of certain forms of subsidies that contribute to overfishin­g and overcapaci­ty, while ensuring appropriat­e and differenti­al treatment for developing nations.

But Wolfenden said at the ministeria­l “the prohibitio­n on those rules that were going to dictate how those subsidies would be cut was so watered down and so weak for, particular­ly for those countries who could meet the thresholds.”

He said at the end it was very much a case of try your best to not make these subsidies, which he calls a complete failure of the WTO mandate.

“The mandate was saying, you need to prohibit these subsidies that contribute to overfishin­g and over capacity. And what was on the table for the big fishing plane failed that completely.”

The Pacific plan

He said the Pacific came to the meeting with a “strong proposal to explicitly come up with a mechanism to make the subsidies for distant water fishing come to a standstill, and then reduce within a certain amount of time.”

“So they were very clear in what they were asking for and explicit that this had to have an impact on the subsidies.

“This was heavily contested by a lot of the big fishing nations, because you know, it’s very much in their interest to not have that come into effect.”

Wolfenden said the end result was a text that largely gave those big fishing nations a number of options to evade the push on subsidies.

Pacific nations now earn significan­t amounts of money from fishing licences, so why the emphasis on removing subsidies?

He said firstly there is the matter of overfishin­g, so cutting subsidies would help both in terms of limiting the distant water nations ability to catch more than they’re allowed.

But he said it also opens up the prospect for Pacific countries to increase their own domestic fishing capacity.

“When you have your own boats fishing your own resources, the economic benefits to that are far greater than if you’re paying someone else or someone else is coming in taking the fish and taking it elsewhere. So, we see these subsidies play into that.”

What is next for the WTO?

Auckland University emeritus law professor, Jane Kelsey, a long-time critic of the WTO, was also observing the ministeria­l in Abu Dhabi.

She said the lack of agreement on almost anything “follows a pattern of failures over successive ministeria­ls. The WTO continues its steady decline, no longer just on life support but nearing death’s door.”

Kelsey said the refusal of developing countries to be steam-rolled into accepting global trade rules that fail to address their concerns was a significan­t feature of the meeting.

She said she hopes “the failure of yet another ministeria­l will generate an overdue recognitio­n that the neoliberal agenda of the WTO is past its use-by date.”

Wolfenden said when the WTO tries to deal with issues like sustainabi­lity, fisheries or climate change, its approach seems totally focussed on creating a better business environmen­t.

“So lowering import taxes, lowering the ability of government­s to regulate services, it becomes problemati­c with that when sometimes these sustainabi­lity issues that they’re trying to resolve, they’re using the same tools that caused the problem, to try and solve it,” he said.

Wolfenden said the WTO faces a reckoning over this kind of ideologica­l approach to all problems.

“Professor Kelsey is speaking to a lot of fundamenta­l truths that I think the WTO hopes to avoid, but are becoming quite a reckoning for them.”

When you have your own boats fishing your own resources, the economic benefits to that are far greater than if you’re paying someone else

–Mr Adam Wolfenden

 ?? Photo: RNZI / GIFF JOHNSON ?? The Marshalls fisheries department director Glen Joseph said he is happy to see that the purse seine fishing industry has begun taking action to modify fishing gear to reduc by catch of bigeye tuna. Here, a purse seiner off loads its tuna catch in Majuro.
Photo: RNZI / GIFF JOHNSON The Marshalls fisheries department director Glen Joseph said he is happy to see that the purse seine fishing industry has begun taking action to modify fishing gear to reduc by catch of bigeye tuna. Here, a purse seiner off loads its tuna catch in Majuro.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji