The Prince George Citizen

Feds ban shark finning

- Mia RABSON

OTTAWA — Carving fins off live sharks and tossing them in the ocean to drown will be illegal in Canada as early as Friday.

Importing shark fins that are no longer attached to sharks will also be against the law, as part of efforts to prevent Canada from being complicit in the practice of “shark finning” elsewhere.

“It is a practice that is not sustainabl­e and is inhumane,” Fisheries Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said Thursday.

Shark finning has been barred as a condition of getting a fishing licence in Canada since 1994 but legislatio­n that passed through Parliament this week will turn those licensing conditions into law.

Canada is the first country in the world to ban the import and export of unattached shark fins.

Wilkinson held a news conference about the ban at a Toronto memorial to filmmaker Rob Stewart, whose 2007 documentar­y Sharkwater helped raise global awareness of the problem. Stewart died in a scuba diving accident in Florida in 2017 making a followup to Sharkwater, and his parents, Brian and Sandy Stewart, said Thursday their son would be very proud about this developmen­t.

“This is a huge step for Canada,” Brian Stewart said. “We’ve got to stop the devastatio­n in the world’s oceans.”

The United States has similar legislatio­n in Congress, which the Stewarts hope will gain traction following Canada’s move on the issue.

Multiple bills have been introduced but not passed at the federal and provincial levels over the last decade to end the practice in Canada, which is the largest importer of shark fins outside of Asia.

This latest legislatio­n had all-party involvemen­t. It was introduced in 2017 by Conservati­ve Sen. Michael MacDonald and sponsored in the House of Commons by NDP MP Fin Donnelly. However in early June, it became clear that the bill, as a private member’s bill, was unlikely to pass before Parliament rose.

With a federal election looming, if the bill didn’t pass this spring, it would once again die and have to be started from scratch with the new Parliament in the fall.

So Wilkinson worked with the Senate, which considered other amendments to the Fisheries Act in Bill C-68, to add most of MacDonald’s bill.

That legislatio­n passed the Senate for the final time on June 18, and will become law as soon as it is proclaimed.

That is currently expected to happen on Friday.

“It’s a historic moment,” said Rebecca Aldworth, executive director of Humane Society Internatio­nal/ Canada.

She said the decision should lead to a reduction in shark deaths because so much of the shark-fishing industry is based on finning. It is more lucrative for shark fishers to carve off the fins and carry only them on their boats, because they fetch the best price.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? A worker cuts a shark fin at a fish market in Dubai, United Arab Emirates in 2012. Carving fins off live sharks and leaving them in the ocean to drown will become illegal in Canada.
AP FILE PHOTO A worker cuts a shark fin at a fish market in Dubai, United Arab Emirates in 2012. Carving fins off live sharks and leaving them in the ocean to drown will become illegal in Canada.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada