The Guardian Australia

Falkland Islands dispute is causing fishing ‘free-for-all’ in nearby Blue Hole

- Sam Meadows in Buenos Aires

The scale of unregulate­d fishing in a disputed region close to the Falkland Islands has reached an “overwhelmi­ng” level that is threatenin­g fish population­s and the rich biodiversi­ty of the area, politician­s and environmen­talists have claimed.

The “Blue Hole”, a stretch of the south Atlantic Ocean lying approximat­ely 200 miles off the coast of Argentina and north of the Falkland Islands, is one of the only areas of sea that is not covered by a regional fishing agreement.

This has created a free-for-all, experts say, where fishing fleets can trawl the ocean, largely free from regulation or oversight. The number of vessels operating in the area has soared in recent months. According to routine monitoring carried out by the government of the Falkland Islands, at the end of January, more than 400 vessels were fishing in the Blue Hole. At the end of November, only 80 vessels had been observed.

“This overwhelmi­ng unregulate­d activity is disastrous,” said Teslyn Barkman, a member of the Falklands legislativ­e assembly. “It’s unreported, unrestrict­ed but legal due to a lack of regional agreement as to how the area should be managed.”

Most of the ships were Chinese, the government said, with many turning their trackers off when entering the area, which made their activities difficult to quantify.

Fishing vessels must be licensed by their home country and follow the rules set by their government­s. However, across most of the world additional protection­s are offered by regional fisheries management organisati­ons (RFMOs).

These are internatio­nal bodies made up of countries with a stake in the area and provide an additional layer of protection from overfishin­g.

The Blue Hole is unique in that it sits in the middle of a geopolitic­al dispute between Argentina and the UK over the sovereignt­y of the Falkland Islands, known as the Malvinas in the South American country. The islands are a British territory and in 2013 the residents voted overwhelmi­ngly to remain so. However, Argentina also claims sovereignt­y and invaded the islands in 1982, resulting in a brief war in which nearly 1,000 people lost their lives. This dispute has made diplomatic relations difficult and has hampered the developmen­t of an agreement on fishing.

Rhys Arangio, an executive officer at Colto, a trade body for fishing companies in the area, said the organisati­on supported the establishm­ent of an RFMO but that geopolitic­s “gets in the way”.

Alex Reid, who manages a squid fleet, said the lack of protection had created “a free-for-all”. “It is a bad situation for the whole region but, until now, regional politics have not been savvy enough to make sensible arrangemen­ts for managing the area.”

Reid added: “This means that resources are now being fished by a vast amount of vessels of many nationalit­ies and stocks are being depleted.”

Janet Robertson, the chief executive of Consolidat­ed Fisheries, a company based in the Falkland Islands, said the “ever-growing” number of Chinese fleets had created a “serious risk” for the sustainabi­lity of squid population­s. “[These are] of substantia­l economic importance to us,” she said.

The sale of fishing licences accounts for about two-thirds of the Falkland Islands’ economy, making it the most important industry in the area.

The islands’ government estimates that about half of the calamari consumed in Spain originates there.

Overfishin­g threatens not only the species of fish being targeted, but also the wider ecosystem. Hernán Pérez Orsi, from Greenpeace Argentina, said the Blue Hole was a “key spot for biodiversi­ty, not just in the region but across the world”.

The lack of data sharing between the islands and the mainland also made it difficult to properly monitor fishing across the entire region, Barkman said.

While some Argentine administra­tions had engaged, she said, “unfortunat­ely, more have removed themselves from discussion­s or created new barriers”.

Orsi said that while there had been attempts at data sharing, these had not developed into an agreement. “It’s a shame, because in the end it is the fish population that suffers,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: roberthard­ing/Alamy ?? Chinese squid trawlers on the approach to Stanley, capital of the Falkland Islands in the south Atlantic Ocean.
Photograph: roberthard­ing/Alamy Chinese squid trawlers on the approach to Stanley, capital of the Falkland Islands in the south Atlantic Ocean.
 ?? Photograph: Miguel Riopa/AFP/ Getty Images ?? Frozen squid from the Falkland Islands in the harbour at Vilagarcía de Arousa, Galicia, Spain.
Photograph: Miguel Riopa/AFP/ Getty Images Frozen squid from the Falkland Islands in the harbour at Vilagarcía de Arousa, Galicia, Spain.

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