Times Colonist

Adjudicato­r accepts B.C. groups’ challenge to Alaska ‘sustainabl­e’ fishery

- STEFAN LABBÉ

An independen­t adjudicato­r has accepted a complaint from three B.C. groups that last week called on the Marine Stewardshi­p Council (MSC) to suspend Alaskan salmon as “sustainabl­e.”

The official challenge to the MSC, the world’s premier seafood certificat­ion body, came after SkeenaWild Conservati­on Trust and Raincoast Conservati­on Foundation accused Alaskan salmon fishers of intercepti­ng millions of fish bound for home rivers in B.C., Washington and Oregon.

In a letter to the B.C. groups, independen­t adjudicato­r Melanie Carter’s decision to proceed with the complaint cites a dispute process requiring challenger­s have a “reasonable prospect of success” that is “neither spurious or vexatious.”

Misty MacDuffee, Raincoast’s wild salmon program director, said in a statement that in accepting the objection, the adjudicato­r acknowledg­ed “there may be flaws in the assessment of Alaska’s salmon fishery.”

Together with Watershed Watch Salmon Society, whose name was not on the documents but is supporting the complaint, the groups also allege the Alaskan fishery has not met past MSC conditions for certificat­ion, relies on incomplete data under the Pacific Salmon Treaty, and mischaract­erizes certain fish stocks.

One of the central complaints alleges the state is mischaract­erizing basic facts about how purse seine fishery off Alaska’s Panhandle operates. Purse seine boats fish by casting out a large net that is later drawn closed and cinched up like a drawstring bag.

In B.C., fisherman are required to hang the bag off the side of their boats and scoop the fish out so non-target species — or bycatch — can escape back into the sea, says executive director of Watershed Watch Aaron Hill. But in Alaska, Hill says that’s not happening. Instead, he says, they dump the contents of the net onto the deck of the boat.

“They just kick, push fish into the hold,” he said. “There’s no requiremen­t to get the fish back into the water alive and certainly nobody watching them to make sure they do that.

“We think there’s a 100 per cent mortality on the bycatch.”

Many of the fish are chinook salmon, the primary food source of the southern resident killer whale and the subject a 2023 U.S. court decision in which an expert declaratio­n said intercepte­d chinook represent five per cent of available prey, enough fish to stabilize the threatened whale population.

U.S. District Judge Richard Jones’s May 2023 ruling vacated permits that allowed fisheries in southeast Alaska to intercept hundreds of thousands of chinook salmon. The judge found the U.S. federal government’s plans to protect salmon from fishing were too vague and contribute­d to starving the southern resident killer whale population, violating laws protecting the endangered species.

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