WELCOME TO BILL'S CORNER!
October
2007 |
(archive)
Dear Constituents,
The eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean bluefin tuna stock is declining and
in danger of collapse. We can no longer delay strong action by the international
community to protect this species. As the U.S. representative to the body
charged with conserving bluefin tuna, I believe the International Commission
for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) needs to adopt a three-to-five-year
moratorium on all bluefin tuna fishing in the eastern Atlantic Ocean and
Mediterranean Sea at its annual meeting this November. We may also need to
consider conservation measures for the western Atlantic bluefin tuna fishery
off our coast.
Fishing without restraint
For over a decade, scientists have been sounding the alarm that catches
of eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean bluefin tuna are too high and must
come down. The response? Eastern harvesting countries adopted stacks of paper
specifying all the steps they would take to avert disaster -- and continued
to fish without restraint.
Five years ago, the European Commission championed a plan at ICCAT that
set catches at 32,000 metric tons per year for four years, a level that
far exceeded the 25,000 metric tons recommended by scientists to stabilize
the stock. The EC argued that such a plan was needed to bring all harvesting
countries into the management regime, thereby gaining true control over
the fishery. By the end of that plan, however, overfishing remained rampant
and the stock was on the verge of collapse. To illustrate the vastness of
the problem, catches from 2002 to 2006 exceeded the quota by at least 18,000
metric tons each year — an annual overage of more than 50 percent.
The total quota overrun over the four-year period was 72,000 metric tons.
With such unrestrained fishing, it is no surprise that ICCAT’s scientists
are warning of stock collapse.
Unsustainable management measures were adopted
Last year, eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean bluefin tuna harvesters had
an opportunity to make a new start. Unfortunately, they did not rise to the
challenge. Once again, the EC was in the forefront of those countries arguing
vehemently for unsustainable management measures. The 2006 plan again set
total catches far in excess of scientifically determined levels. This time
ICCAT scientists advised that total catches on the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean
bluefin stock should not exceed 15,000 metric tons if the decline of the
stock was to be stopped. The adopted plan, however, sets the quota at 29,500
metric tons for 2007, nearly twice the scientifically recommended level,
and future reductions over the next three years only decrease the quota level
to 25,900 metric tons.
In pushing for this plan, eastern harvesters stressed that this time there
would be strict monitoring and control requirements to ensure compliance.
One year into the plan, however, there is little sign that eastern harvesters
are respecting the plan adopted in 2006 — and the stock remains in
a perilous condition. While it is true that the European Commission recently
closed its bluefin tuna fishery, this action came, once again, after quota
limits had been overshot. Consistent lack of compliance with international
rules has finally led the EC to begin to investigate its members that
harvest bluefin tuna. This is both a clear acknowledgement of the serious
problems with monitoring and enforcement of the fishery, and a poor reflection
on the management agreement reached at ICCAT in 2006.
Concerns about western stock
I am also concerned about the western stock of bluefin tuna harvested off
our coast. This stock has been under an international rebuilding program
since the late 1990s and compliance with the program by western harvesters
has been very good. In 2006, we again followed the science and cut quotas,
but catches in the western Atlantic Ocean remain low in certain areas. The
reason for this is not well known, but there is a very real concern that
the long-term poor management in the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean bluefin
tuna fishery is negatively impacting the much smaller western Atlantic bluefin
tuna stock due to mixing of the stocks.
Need for moratorium on eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean stock
Effective protection of bluefin tuna in the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean
through a moratorium is the most effective step we can take for the recovery
of this important species. Many harvesters of eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean
bluefin tuna have clearly shown that they are unable — or unwilling — to
implement and enforce internationally agreed rules for this fishery even
when the rules are weak. A moratorium on this fishery is the most enforceable
step ICCAT can take to ensure the future of this species and the fishermen
that depend on it. The international community must be prepared to take
this bold step in November, and both harvesting and market states must
be willing to support this action through effective enforcement.

Bill Hogarth
Director, National Marine Fisheries Service
References
International Commission for the Conservation
of Atlantic Tunas
Report
of the Standing Committee on Research and Statistics of the International
Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas
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