Montreal Gazette

Trade deal may hurt fisheries: study

Job protection­s could be lost under EU pact

- SUE BAILEY THE CANADIAN PRESS

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Canada’s potential free trade deal with Europe should raise alarms that open access to lucrative seafood markets will come at the expense of protection­s for Atlantic fishery jobs, says a new report.

“At stake is the ability of Canadians to pursue public policies that curb domination of the fisheries by large corporatio­ns,” says the study published Wednesday by the leftleanin­g Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es.

“My biggest concern is that Canadian government­s and citizens, particular­ly provincial government­s, will lose their ability to regulate the fishery to maximize local benefits,” author Scott Sinclair said in an interview.

His study, Globalizat­ion, Trade Treaties and the Future of the Atlantic Canadian Fisheries, includes details reported to have been leaked from closed-door Canada-EU trade talks, which are continuing.

They indicate that “the EU is strongly pressuring Canada to abolish minimum processing requiremen­ts” as the two sides work toward a deal known as the Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement, or CETA, says the report.

It’s a contentiou­s issue that recently played out in St. John’s, as the provincial government wrangled for months with Ocean Choice Internatio­nal. At issue was the company’s push for exemptions to minimum processing requiremen­ts meant to safeguard local jobs and share benefits of a publicly owned resource.

The company wanted to ship most of its groundfish catch straight to overseas buyers, saying markets increasing­ly want less-processed product.

In December, the government and Ocean Choice Internatio­nal reached a deal that allows the company to ship up to 75 per cent of its yellowtail flounder quota out of the province unprocesse­d. The rest will be handled at a plant in Fortune, N.L., that will provide 110 full-time jobs for five years.

Scrapping minimum processing requiremen­ts would strip provinces of leverage in future disputes, Sinclair said.

He’s also concerned that other policies that protect domestic inshore fisheries could be challenged under a new deal with Europe. For example, only Canadian independen­t owner-operators can now get inshore fishing licences. For bigger vessels offshore, foreign investors can only hold a minority interest of up to 49 per cent in a Canadian corporatio­n that’s licensed to fish.

Federal Fisheries Minister Keith Ashfield has denied that such measures are in jeopardy.

“Let me be absolutely clear: the fleet separation and owner-operator policies in Atlantic Canada will remain intact,” he said Sept. 21 in Fredericto­n.

Rudy Husny, a spokesman for federal Internatio­nal Trade Minister Ed Fast, said eliminatin­g seafood tariffs as high as 25 per cent would open access to a $25-billion European import market.

But Sinclair raises the prospect that, under a Canada-EU deal, Euro- pean investors could challenge owner-operator restrictio­ns and other domestic fishery protection­s using dispute tribunals that would circumvent Canadian law.

“Protecting Canada’s ability to regulate the fisheries for conservati­on purposes and to ensure that the benefits from fisheries are shared with independen­t fishers and coastal communitie­s should be much higher priorities,” his report concludes.

Keith Hutchings, the provincial minister for innovation, business and rural developmen­t, said open access to the European market of about 500 million consumers would be a major boon for a struggling industry.

 ?? ANDREW RENTON/ POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Policies that protect domestic-inshore fisheries could be challenged under a new EU trade pact, says a study.
ANDREW RENTON/ POSTMEDIA NEWS Policies that protect domestic-inshore fisheries could be challenged under a new EU trade pact, says a study.

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