Greenpeace urges Cairns
tuna summit to end overfishing and control fleets
By GREENPEACE
December 1, 2013
SUVA, Fiji – Greenpeace
activists today deployed a floating banner at a harbour in the
Pacific, reading: “WCPFC Act Now! Fewer boats, more fish”. This
message is directed at the members of the Western and Central Pacific
Fisheries Commission (WCPFC), who are meeting in Cairns, Australia
next week. Greenpeace is urging the Commission to halt the entry of
new industrial fishing vessels into the region and to introduce sharp
cuts to tuna catches as recommended by scientists.
Pacific tuna stocks are in decline with bigeye, yellowfin and albacore
tunas now all in need of urgent management action to ensure future
sustainability and livelihoods for the region’s vulnerable coastal
states. Countries like the Philippines, a major tuna player and a full
voting member of the Commission, will be closely monitoring the
discussions and ensure that the sustainability of tuna stocks will be
a top priority, instead of asking for exemptions to conservation
measures.
“This is the 10th meeting of the Commission and it is time that its
members stop ignoring the science and put strong precautionary
measures in place to ensure overfishing is halted and that the number
of vessels in the fishery is urgently capped and capacity reduced,”
said Mark Dia, Regional Oceans Campaigner for Greenpeace Southeast
Asia.
Much of the blame for overfishing is placed on the large international
purse seine fleet originating from the US, Taiwan, Korea, Spain, China
and Japan that for much of their catch relies on destructive fish
aggregation devices or FADs. The purse seine fishery was responsible
for over two thirds of the more than 2.5 million tons of tuna fished
out of the Pacific last year alone. This method catches large amounts
of juvenile tuna leading to steep stock declines, particularly of
bigeye and yellowfin tunas.
“Purse seine vessels can fish without using destructive FADs, their
use needs to be banned now. Tuna caught this way is already being
widely rejected by consumers all over the world and the industry can
benefit from the increased demand for more sustainably caught products
if they act now,” added Dia.
Greenpeace warns that coastal communities dependent on tuna for food
and livelihoods are already suffering due to inaction by the
Commission. Just a few days ago the Alliance of Tuna Handliners from
General Santos City, Philippines called on the WCPFC to act now in
order to save the stocks and the people who depend on them.
“Unfortunately the little people are forgotten in these negotiations
as the multimillion dollar company CEOs exert pressure on country
delegations to block progressive measures. We certainly hope
governments here this week act to ensure sustainable fisheries and
livelihoods instead of just protecting the next executive pay check of
the rich and the powerful,” continued Dia.
The region's longline fleets – catching tuna for sashimi and the
American albacore market – are also largely seen as being out of
control and unregulated, with rampant under-reporting and illegal
fishing taking place, especially in the high seas.
“For too long the massive foreign longline fleets in the region have
plundered fish with impunity. They now need to be brought under
control, catches reduced, number of vessels reduced to sustainable and
economical levels and the high seas pockets closed to all fishing,”
said Sari Tolvanen, Oceans Campaigner for Greenpeace International.
“As a way forward, we are calling on the Philippine government to take
the lead by implementing laws on capacity reduction so that our own
seas will have time to recover, securing the livelihood of thousands
of Filipino fishermen, and ensuring more fish for the future,” added
Dia.
Greenpeace is campaigning for a sustainable fishing industry and a
global network of marine reserves covering 40% of the world’s oceans
as the necessary steps to leaving future generations with oceans able
to sustain life on earth.