Stabroek News Sunday

Fisheries Dep’t working with seafood exporters to meet sustainabl­e fishing standards by 2020

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The Department of Fisheries of the Ministry of Agricultur­e is working along with local seafood exporters to attain internatio­nal certificat­ion under the Marine Stewardshi­p Council (MSC) by 2020 to meet market requiremen­ts, according to Chief Fisheries Officer Denzil Roberts.

The MSC is a UK organisati­on that sets standards for sustainabl­e fishing within the industry.

Roberts’ disclosure comes in light of B.E.V Processors Inc. owner Bruce Vieira citing the requiremen­ts as one of the reasons for his company pulling out of the market. Vieira had explained that the new requiremen­ts were making it difficult for his company to access certain markets since importers have been requesting shrimp that were caught using sustainabl­e methods and techniques.

“It’s an eco-label that they require for you to export to a country. The country has national standards and even though you comply with that the private supermarke­t and consumers demand a different and additional standard. What they are asking us to show in this case is that we are using sustainabl­e fishing methods and it’s a private requiremen­t,” Roberts said, while emphasisin­g that the markets the exporters currently access are requesting that they are compliant with the MSC.

Speaking with this newspaper last Friday, Roberts said that becoming market compliant is an issue the Ministry has been trying to address for years, and stated that it is currently working with consultant­s to figure out the way forward.

This includes setting up a ‘Seabob Working Group,’ which consists of representa­tives from the Ministry of Agricultur­e, the Private Sector Commission and the Trawlers Associatio­n, with which they meet once per month to thrash out issues and to “get everybody’s act in order.”

“It’s a matter of synchronis­ing everyone and getting everyone to do the same things and agree on the regulation­s. The department has to play a part in some aspect and we were working on it quite a while but they had changed some of the requiremen­ts. It’s difficult but we are hoping this year, before next month, to request an assessment and then [there’s] proving that we are up to date. They usually give you a score and depending on the score

Not in my lifetime

they will give you the MSC label that will be fixed on packages to ensure continuity and access to other markets,” Roberts explained.

He noted, however, that the issue is difficult to address since a lot of the trawlers that fish for shrimp are privately owned, and because the majority of fishermen operate privately and only supply to processors and exporters, it is more difficult to enforce standards.

Gonsalves said there is no clear demarcatio­n between the Single Market and the Single Economy and that he does not think that currency convertibi­lity and the freedom of movement essential to the single market and economy will happen in five years.

Two reasons why the region cannot go to the Single Economy, he said, is because of the nature of the restrictiv­e economies and their combined state of underdevel­opment, and because units within CARICOM as currently constructe­d are unequally yoked.

“These are practical matters of life in production and reproducti­on,” Gonsalves stated, adding, “I don’t think they will happen in my lifetime. I think we should do the practical things we can do immediatel­y and

While pointing out that Vieira has done a “bulk of work” in getting the private fishermen to comply with the rules and to “step in line,” Roberts said that a majority of them are not aware of the importance. He also noted that there has been no serious demand for suppliers to be compliant and they have until 2020 to ensure that they adhere to the markets’ requiremen­ts.

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Denzil Roberts

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