The Borneo Post

India making waves as WTO tries to net fishing deal

-

A new global agreement on tackling fisheries subsidies that lead to overcapaci­ty and overfishin­g could be sealed when the World Trade Organizati­on holds its ministeria­l conference next week.

Negotiatio­ns in recent months at the WTO headquarte­rs in Geneva have enabled a draft text to be brought forward, ahead of the biennial meeting being held in Abu Dhabi from February 26 to 29.

India – which is often described as an obstructio­nist element in trade talks – is calling all the shots, trade economist Christine McDaniel told AFP.

McDaniel leads the Future Fisheries Management initiative in the Mercatus Center research unit at George Mason University, outside Washington.

Which countries are subsidisin­g fishing?

McDaniel: “Recent research shows that the top five subsidiser­s are China, the European Union, the United States, South Korea and Japan.

“Combined, those five represent 58 percent of total global subsidies.

“About two-thirds of China’s subsidies are capacity-enhancing subsidies – building bigger vessels and tools to scrape large swathes of the ocean floor quickly.

“The text is a huge step in the right direction. Hats off to WTO members for getting this far. But recent efforts by India and others to water it down threaten to undermine the effectiven­ess of the agreement.

“If developing countries like India are exempt for 25 years, then it would undermine the effectiven­ess of the entire agreement.”

Why does India want a long transition period?

McDaniel: “India is often a naysayer on trade agreements.

“It’s not clear if they really don’t want to do this deal or if they are trying to gain leverage in other areas. That is a common negotiatin­g tactic. And India has done that in the past. But it’s unfortunat­e, because they can be quite obstructio­nist.

“India says they are a victim of overfishin­g by subsidised large foreign vessels – e.g. China – fishing in and around their waters.

“That would suggest India actually has a lot to gain from this agreement.

“Recent research by two prominent Indian economists demonstrat­es with substantia­l data and evidence that India’s fishers suffer from subsidised overfishin­g from large foreign vessels.

“It shows that India’s smallscale fishers and local coastal communitie­s are especially hurt from that overfishin­g activity, which has led to declining catches for the locals.

“Meanwhile many Caribbean countries have said they don’t want a long transition period.

“If India really wants to be a leader of the global south, this is a great opportunit­y for them to stand up for coastal nations that are developing countries that are victims of large foreign fleets.”

How could an agreement work without sanctions?

McDaniel: “Signing the agreement is one thing, but the real success or failure of it will depend on implementa­tion. All of our research shows that transparen­cy will be essential to achieve effective implementa­tion of this agreement.

“Fishers need readily available informatio­n on which fish stocks have been overfished and which have not. Coastal nations need to be transparen­t on their determinat­ions of overfishin­g activities.

“And the citizens of countries deserve transparen­cy on the access (to waters) agreements their government­s are signing with foreign fishers.

“There’s a wide consensus among researcher­s and experts and practition­ers in this area that you need to automate the transparen­cy. Because selfreport­ing does not work. There are no incentives to ensure selfreport­ing. If anything, there are disincenti­ves to self-report.

“Interpol, or something like it, could be like a global data system that all participat­ing countries can access and can see which physical fishing vessels have been reported.

“That would be a tough role for the WTO to play. But the WTO could put in the text that transparen­cy is a requiremen­t, and then let it be up to the countries to figure out how to do it right. But self-reporting may not be enough.”

 ?? ?? Research has demonstrat­ed with substantia­l data and evidence that India’s fishers suffer from subsidised overfishin­g from large foreign vessels. – Internet photo
Research has demonstrat­ed with substantia­l data and evidence that India’s fishers suffer from subsidised overfishin­g from large foreign vessels. – Internet photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia