The Manila Times

Arctic waters declared off limits to fishing

- AFP

OTTAWA: Arctic and major fishing nations, including China, announced on Friday (Saturday in Manila) that they have agreed to a moratorium on commercial fishing in Arctic waters before a fishery in the icy region is even feasible.

The far north is warming at nearly twice the global average rate, causing changes in the size and distributi­on of fish stocks that may become more attractive to fishers in the medium to long term.

Canadian Fisheries Minister Dominic Leblanc said Canada, together with the European Union, China, Denmark - for Greenland and the Faroe Islands - Iceland, Japan, South Korea, Norway, Russia and the United States agreed “that no commercial fishing will take place in the high seas portion of the central Arctic Ocean while we gain a better understand­ing of the area’s ecosystems.”

They also agreed that before any fishing takes places, they must establish “appropriat­e conservati­on and management measures.”

To that end, the parties committed to conducting joint scientific research and monitoring to try to better understand Arctic Ocean ecosystems and whether the region can support commercial fisheries in the future.

Karmenu Vella, European Union Commission­er for the Environmen­t, Fisheries and Maritime Affairs, called the legally binding agreement “historic.”

“It will fill an important gap in the internatio­nal ocean governance framework and will safeguard fragile marine ecosystems for future generation­s,” he said.

The agreement in principle must still be ratified by all 10 parties.

Greenpeace, praising the deal, said the moratorium is expected to endure for at least the next 16 years, covering an area of 2.8 million square kilometers (one million square miles).

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