Times Colonist

Groups challenge Alaska’s ‘sustainabl­e’ fisheries

- STEFAN LABBÉ

Two B.C. conservati­on groups have filed a notice of objection to the world’s premier sustainabl­e fisheries body calling on it to reject the re-certificat­ion of Alaska’s salmon fisheries as “sustainabl­e” on grounds it continues to intercept at-risk salmon population­s bound for B.C., Washington and Oregon.

SkeenaWild Conservati­on Trust and Raincoast Conservati­on Foundation submitted the notice to the U.K.-based Marine Stewardshi­p Council (MSC) April 16. They target two districts in the waters of southeast Alaska, where the submission says boats have deployed nets to corral schools of fish and indiscrimi­nately scoop up a number of non-target species, including steelhead, chinook and sockeye salmon.

The Marine Stewardshi­p Council first certified the Alaskan fisheries as sustainabl­e in 2000. Unless it’s renewed, that certificat­ion will expire in 2024.

SkeenaWild’s executive director Greg Knox estimates about three million B.C. salmon are intercepte­d in the southeast corner of Alaska every year.

“We believe they’re intercepti­ng more salmon than we’re catching in all of our fisheries in British Columbia,” Knox said.

Seen by many as the global “gold standard” of sustainabl­e fish, Knox says that by allowing Alaskan intercepti­ons of B.C.-bound fish, it is essentiall­y hoodwinkin­g consumers around the world.

“It’s really a case of eco-fraud, where they’re putting up little blue sustainabi­lity label, the Marine Stewardshi­p Council label, on packages to try to misreprese­nt to consumers the sustainabi­lity of the fish they’re buying,” said Knox.

Misty MacDuffee, the wild salmon program director at Raincoast Conservati­on Foundation, said that while targeting Alaskan fisheries, her organizati­on also continues to put pressure on the intercepti­on of salmon in B.C. waters.

In 2019, the group holding MSC certificat­es for B.C. sockeye, pink and chum voluntaril­y dropped out of the program, citing a lack of commitment from federal fisheries managers. MacDuffee said focusing on Alaska wasn’t about giving B.C. a pass, but making sure consumers weren’t duped.

“If someone says, ‘Fine, give them the blue check mark’ and nobody questions that, that’s a problem,” she said.

Alaska continues fishing despite threat to killer whales

The two groups claim that MRAG Americas, the company assessing whether Alaska’s fishery is sustainabl­e, has not carried out due diligence in its descriptio­n of how the fishery operates.

They allege the company “significan­tly underestim­ates” how many salmon are being killed as they pass through Alaska on their way to rivers spanning the Skeena and Nass in B.C.’s north to the Columbia River on the Washington-Oregon border.

The submission­s also point to a U.S. court decision that found more than 90 per cent of the chinook salmon caught in Alaska is not from there. In May 2023, a U.S. federal judge threw out a key authorizat­ion that has allowed for those intercepti­ons, finding government plans to protect salmon from fishing were too vague and contribute­d to starving the southern resident killer whale population in violation of the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

The State of Alaska has since appealed that ruling in a case that is set to be heard in the coming months. In the meantime, the southeast Alaskan fishery has been allowed to go ahead this year over fears it would have a massive economic impact on people who rely on the catches.

“They’ve been allowed to continue fishing while they figure that out,” Knox said. “They’ve allowed them to keep essentiall­y overfishin­g endangered population­s and southern resident killer whale food.”

An independen­t adjudicato­r will assess the merits of the notice of objection within 15 days of the submission­s. If accepted, Alaska and the two NGOs will both have a chance to present evidence and argue their case.

‘Our fisheries are sustainabl­y managed’

Matt Donohoe, fisherman and president of the Alaska Trollers Associatio­n, said he was confused why fisherman in his part of the industry were being targeted.

“It’s dumbfoundi­ng that such a small group of people are taking heat,” he said. “They give MSC certificat­ions to the factory boats in the Bering Sea, but they don’t seem to think that’s a problem.”

Reached for comment, Doug Vincent-Lang, commission­er for Alaska’s Department of Fish and Game, described the claimed three million intercepte­d fish as a “questionab­le” number. He also questioned why NGOs were going after Alaska’s MSC sustainabi­lity certificat­ions when B.C. has decoupled itself from the internatio­nal scheme.

“We’re a bit confused by that inconsiste­ncy,” Vincent-Lang said. “We’re also somewhat perplexed as to why they’re attacking through the MSC certificat­ion process when MSC itself is holding fisheries inequitabl­y to standards.”

He pointed to the certificat­ion body’s treatment of Russia, saying “they’re basically certifying them without the independen­t observatio­ns.”

Vincent-Lang said the state abides by all measures under the Pacific Salmon Treaty — a bilateral agreement first signed in 1985 and renegotiat­ed every decade to provide a framework for the U.S. and Canada to work together to manage salmon stocks.

“We are convinced that our fisheries are sustainabl­y managed,” he added. “If they want to change the negotiatin­g principles of that treaty, we can.”

“We’re confused over why they’re doing it this way.”

B.C. has drasticall­y reduced the number of salmon it fishes every year from nearly 13 million in 2002 to just over two million two decades later. Knox says it’s part of a plan to protect and rebuild salmon — a plan made more difficult by Alaska’s intercepti­ons.

“They’re making it impossible for us to rebuild a lot of our salmon and steelhead population­s,” he said. “And to boot, they get to sell their fish as sustainabl­e into markets all over the world and fetch a higher price.”

 ?? WATERSHED WATCH/SKEENAWILD ?? Commercial purse seine fishers haul their net while fishing for pink and chum salmon in the southeaste­rn region of Alaska.
WATERSHED WATCH/SKEENAWILD Commercial purse seine fishers haul their net while fishing for pink and chum salmon in the southeaste­rn region of Alaska.

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