Business World

No separate treatment for f ishing in disputed waters, WTO urged

- Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

“HARMFUL” fishing subsidies should be banned everywhere, with no carve-outs for special cases like fishing in disputed waters, food advocacy group Tugon Kabuhayan said.

Tugon Kabuhayan said at a virtual briefing Monday that the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) should continue hearing cases of harmful subsidies whether fishing operations occur in disputed waters or not.

“Harmful subsidies should be prohibited in all waters, disputed or not. Otherwise, all a country needs to do is to create a ‘dispute’ to get out of the coverage of the prohibitio­n,” it said.

Asis G. Perez, Tugon Kabuhayan convener, said the Philippine­s will continue to suffer if the WTO decides against the position of the Philippine­s and not address the harmful subsidies given by China to its commercial fishing fleet.

“The Philippine­s will continue to suffer since our marine resources will be exploited through heavily-subsidized operations, and our local fishers will face stiff competitio­n,” Mr. Perez said.

On July 15, Agricultur­e Secretary William D. Dar and Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez headed the Philippine delegation during the ministeria­l meeting of the WTO trade negotiatio­ns committee on the fisheries subsidies agreement.

During the meeting, Mr. Dar urged WTO members to reconsider the language of the current draft text of the agreement which provides that “if a prohibited subsidy occurs in disputed waters, it will not be addressed by a WTO panel as this will provide a loophole for countries involved in maritime disputes to be exempted from the discipline­s.”

Mr. Dar called on other agricultur­e and trade ministers to ramp up negotiatio­ns to create new discipline­s to remove subsidies that contribute to illegal, unreported, and unregulate­d fishing, overfished stocks, overcapaci­ty, and overfishin­g.

“Issues of territoria­l claims or delimitati­on of maritime boundaries or zones are of the highest concern for the Philippine­s, but nothing must prohibit a duly constitute­d panel from hearing a case,” Mr. Dar said.

Citing the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, Tugon Kabuhayan said fisheries subsidies tend to creating incentives for mismanagin­g fisheries.

“We believe that the prohibitio­n against harmful subsidies will result in better management of the dwindling fish stocks which some fishing operations are able to exploit, even if such exploitati­on is no longer economical­ly viable, simply because of these harmful and in reality, wrongful subsidies,” Tugon Kabuhayan said.

Chinese fishing vessels have been sighted in Julian Felipe Reef, with the government estimating them to be 60 meters in length with a capacity of about 240,000 kilograms of fish.

In May, Tugon Kabuhayan estimated that the Philippine­s has lost at least P3.5 billion worth of marine catch due to the presence and fishing activities of the Chinese.

“These vessels are committing illegal, unreported, and unregulate­d fishing in our waters and they are able to do it despite it being not economical­ly viable because these Chinese fishing vessels are recipients of massive Chinese government subsidies,” Tugon Kabuhayan said.

“Based on our fishing industry experience, the daily cost to maintain and operate a vessel this size is around P500,000 daily or around $10,000. This means that these vessels should be able to catch around 10 metric tons of tuna or around 12-14 tons of round scad (galunggong) just to break even,” it added. —

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