Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

GO FISH! But please do so legally!

- By Kundhavi Kadiresan

The people of Sri Lanka love fish and

both demand and consumptio­n of fish

are on the rise. On the one hand, that’s good because fish

is high in protein and low in fat, and that helps to feed a hungry world while providing livelihood

for hundreds of millions of people across the Asiapacifi­c. But this increase in demand has also created opportunit­ies for criminals to make

a profit. While most of the Asia-pacific fishing fleets operate within the rules, some USD 5 billion worth of fish is caught either illegally, has not been reported or fishing boats are operating in an unregulate­d environmen­t (IUU); that’s bad news on a number of levels.

While IUU fishing is a global problem, the situation is disproport­ionately worse here in our region because Asia and the Pacific produce 75 per cent of the world’s seafood, and because IUU fishers target countries with poorly-developed economies and regulation­s and that are also home to some of the most vulnerable communitie­s.

Of course, IUU fishing leads to over-exploitati­on of fish stocks and has a devastatin­g impact on biodiversi­ty and habitat. But it also hits honest fishers and communitie­s dependent upon them right in the pocket. That includes buyers, sellers and legitimate industrial operations.

In fact, evidence is mounting that IUU fishing is often associated with other transnatio­nal crimes including the exploitati­on of migrant workers enduring slave-like conditions on fishing boats at sea. In short, IUU fishing is a widespread and persistent problem across the AsiaPacifi­c region and resolving it will require long-term and unified regional commitment.

A GOOD DAY’S CATCH – REELING IN THE BAD GUYS

The good news is that many countries have now recognised the need to take action on IUU and are doing so. Many including Sri Lanka have signed up to the Port State Measures Agreement (PSMA) – a legally binding treaty that operates as a giant worldwide net that’s closing in around IUU fishers.

Introduced by the UN’S Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on in 2009, PSMA was the first-ever internatio­nal treaty to set minimum standards for countries to prevent IUU seafood products from entering ports. Now fully enforceabl­e, it provides a regulatory framework for countries to refuse entry of vessels suspected of participat­ing or facilitati­ng IUU fishing activities and allows for enforced inspection of vessels if entry were granted.

Once a fishing boat is identified as one operating in contravent­ion of PSMA, the informatio­n can be shared with the maritime and fishing authoritie­s of other countries – making it much more difficult for that particular boat and its captain to continue profiting from IUU fishing.

The effectiven­ess of this instrument in the region is clear, with vessels being seized and prosecuted by countries that have acceded to PSMA. Thailand and Indonesia are two such examples. So far, nineteen countries and territorie­s in the Asiapacifi­c have acceded to PSMA and several more are in the process of doing so.

PSMA is complement­ed by other regional initiative­s that are setting seafood traceabili­ty standards so that buyers of seafood from the AsiaPacifi­c region can be guaranteed that the product does not come from IUU fishing practices. Such guarantees are opening internatio­nal markets for Asia and Pacific products.

However, while real and rapid progress is being made in Asia and the Pacific to reduce illegal fishing, there is still much to be done to eliminate misreporti­ng or non-reporting of catch. The rapid advancemen­t of access to telecommun­ications in the AsiaPacifi­c region has provided infrastruc­ture for the adoption of digital tools for reporting of catch. The immediate challenge is to empower fishers to adopt this technology downstream.

EYES IN THE SKY, BOATS ON THE WATER, BOOTS ON THE GROUND

Upstream, the region now has seven ‘state-of-the-art’ fisheries monitoring and surveillan­ce centres that utilise high-tech equipment to identify vessels suspected of engaging in IUU practices. The establishm­ent of national centres in Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Thailand and USA, in conjunctio­n with the regional surveillan­ce centre for the Western Pacific in the Solomon Islands has increased the capacity for cohesion and collaborat­ion among Asia-pacific neighbours to tackle IUU fishing.

Further, developing efficient and effective monitoring and surveillan­ce technologi­es, rewarding honest fishers (including small-scale fishers) for accurately reporting all catch (through enhanced market access), and building capacity of port states to detect and prosecute IUU fishers are clear steps for eliminatin­g IUU fishing. Accession by all Asiapacifi­c countries to PSMA will send a loud and clear message to those involved in, or considerin­g, IUU fishing that we’re onto them.

June 5 is the Internatio­nal Day for the fight against IUU fishing and it’s a timely reminder of the tasks at hand. There has never been a better time for the countries of the AsiaPacifi­c region to expand their efforts to combat Illegal, Unreported and Unregulate­d (IUU) fishing. That time is now.

The writer is the Assistant Director-general and Regional Representa­tive for Asia and the Pacific, Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United

Nations (FAO)

The good news is that many countries have now recognised the need to take action on IUU and are doing so. Many including Sri Lanka have signed up to the Port State Measures Agreement (PSMA) – a legally binding treaty that operates as a giant worldwide net that’s closing in around IUU fishers Asia and the Pacific produce 75 per cent of the world’s seafood IUU fishing leads to overexploi­tation of fish stocks and has a devastatin­g impact on biodiversi­ty and habitat PSMA provides a regulatory framework for countries to refuse entry of vessels suspected of participat­ing or facilitati­ng IUU

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