WMU-MOF-KMI
CAPFISH PROJECT
The Second Workshop 15-18 February 2022
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CA
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Day
Pr Se oject con dW ork
1
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The the Globa Fig l ht A Prob gai lem nst o It f IUU
Fis
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Keynote Presentation :The Global Problem of IUU Fishing Professor U. Rashid Sumaila, University of British Columbia
Expert Presentation 1 The : History and Role of the FAO in the Fight Against IUU fishing Dr. Matthew Camilleri and Alicia Mosteiro, FAO Expert Presentation 2 The : FAO’s Port State Measures Agreement Dr. Matthew Camilleri and Alicia Mosteiro, FAO
Expert Presentation 3 The : ILO’s Role in the Fight Against IUU Fishing and the Work in Fishing Convention (C188) Mr. Brandt Wagner, ILO Expert Presentation 4 The : IMO’s Role in the Fight Against IUU Fishing and the Cape Town Agreement Ms. Sandra Allnutt, IMO
Expert Presentation 5 Design : Aspects of Fishing Vessels: The Importance of Ratifying the CTA 2012 Dr. Miguel Nunez
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in
Day 1 | KeynotePresentation
The global problem of IUU fishing U. Rashid Sumaila Fisheries Economics Research Unit Global Fisheries Cluster The University of British Columbia Vancouver, Canada r.sumaila@oceans.ubc.ca @DrRashidSumaila
Outline of talk • Why should you care about IUU fishing? • The ocean and the marine life it hold are crucial for our lives and livelihoods – are under threat; • Magnitude, scope of IUU fishing; • From IUU fishing to illicit trade in fish catch; • West African case study.
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Why should you be concerned about IUU fishing • IUU fishing is widespread: – Why is IUU so widespread?
• Fuels illicit trade in fish catch; • Ecological impacts: – Makes nonsense of stock assessments, resulting in depletion of fish stocks and biodiversity.
Why should you be concerned about IUU fishing • Huge economic impacts: – Economic losses to the legitimate economy; – It is corrosive if not stopped …
• Social impacts: – Conflicts between domestic small scale fleets and IUU fishing fleets. – Food security effects.
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Millions of people depend on the ocean No fish, no fishers, no fish protein or dollars
We are ‘overtaking’ & ‘overpolluting’ the ocean Pauly et al. 1998; Jackson et al. 2001, Halpern et al. 2008; Abbott & Sumaila 2019
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The current state of marine biodiversity • ~66%: Extent of the marine environment that has been significantly altered by human actions; • >55%: Ocean area covered by industrial fishing. Source: IPBES Global Assessment (2019).
The current state of marine biodiversity • 33%: Marine fish stocks in 2015 fished at unsustainable levels (60% maximally sustainably fished; only 7% under-fished); • 3-25%: Projected decrease in fish biomass by the end of the century depending on climate warming scenarios, respectively; Source: IPBES Global Assessment (2019). - 16 -
The current state of marine biodiversity • Up to 33%: Estimated share in 2011 of world’s reported fish catch that is IUU.
Source: IPBES Global Assessment (2019).
Ocean biodiversity loss has serious human consequences
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Some drivers of ocean biodiversity depletion • Ineffective governance & management; • Lack of adequate regional & global cooperation; • Insufficient proactive protection of the ocean, e.g., the use of protected areas; • The provision of harmful subsidies; • IUU and illicit trade in ocean resources.
What is IUU fishing? • I = illegal; • U = unreported; • U = unregulated.
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Illegal fishing is widespread (Sumaila et al., 2006)
Why: Economics of IUU fishing • Draws on the general economic literature of crime and punishment (Becker, 1968); • That is, an individual will commit an offence iff the private expected benefit exceeds the expected cost of doing so; • Here: – Engage in IUU fishing iff the expected profits or net benefit is positive (Sutinen and Kuperan, 1999).
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Economic drivers of IUU fishing • Key elements of benefits: – Potential catch; – Fish price; – Detection likelihood (T). – Expected benefit = (1- T)*catch value.
Economic drivers of IUU fishing • Key elements of Cost – – – –
Amount of fine; Variable cost of illegal fishing; Cost of avoidance activities; Fishers’ moral and social standing in society;
– Expected cost = T * fine imposed + other costs
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Economic drivers of IUU fishing • The decision rule: Engage in illegal fishing if and only if: – Expected benefit = (1- T)*catch value is greater than – Expected cost = T * fine imposed + other costs
T
Quantitative results (1 in 5 chance ) (Sumaila et al., 2006) Vessel / Gear
Arresting Country
Fishery
Expected Benefit (USD)
Expected Penalty (USD)
Total Cost (USD)
Total Expecte d Cost / Benefit
Deterrence fine multiple
Longline
Australia
Patagonian toothfish
504 000
87 000
526 091
1.04
0.75
Pots
Japan
Crab
38 256
1 483
31 131
0.81
5.8
Bottom trawler
Mexico
Shrimp
22 060
1 091
16 428
0.74
6.2
Bottom trawler
Russia
Alaska pollack
8 818
234
4 539
0.51
19.4
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Case 1: Namibian fisheries
• … from ‘IUU Fishing Paradise’ • … to ‘IUU Fishing Hell’ – IUU fishing before independence; – IUU fishing after independence.
Case 2: Patagonian toothfish • … high price of fish – is the main attractor to IUU fishing; • … also, the low detection likelihood - large area to patrol and few resources for the number of vessels fishing is a driver.
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Case 3: Northwestern Australia • … poverty among IUU fishers - the main driver of IUU fishing; – despite a high probability of getting caught and severe penalty the need to generate an income is stronger; – the alternatives to IUU fishing require even more (hard) work for much less economic benefits.
From IUU fishing to illicit trade • If IUU fishing is widespread then it is likely that illicit trade in marine fish catch is also common worldwide; • But what is illicit trade?
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Following the WEF, we define illicit trade in marine resources as …
• Seafood trade that involves money, goods or value gained from IUU fishing by foreign & domestic industrial fishing fleets, and by artisanal fishing vessels that catch fish for commercial purposes: – Subsistence sector …
– Artisanal sector … 23
Sumaila (2018): Ghana J. of Economics
Method • We combine ecological-economic databases to estimate the magnitude of illicit trade in marine fish catch and its impacts on biodiversity, people and economies.
Sumaila et al. (2020): Science Advances - 24 -
Economic losses across the global fish value chain
Sumaila et al. (2020): Science Advances
IUU fishing and illicit trade in seafood • Global losses due to illicit trade: – 8 to 14 million tonnes of unreported catches are potentially traded illicitly yearly – Gross revenues of US$ 9 to US$ 17 billion associated with these catches; – Loss in economic impact is US$ 26 to 50 billion; – Losses to countries’ tax revenues are US$ 2 & US$ 4 billion.
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Economic losses across the global fish value chain
Geographic region
Economic
Income
Tax revenue*
(US$ x 106)
(US$ x 106)
(US$ x 106)
Africa
13,877
3,322
1,513
World
13,877
3,322
1,513
Sumaila et al. (2020): Science Advances
Let’s look at the countries in West Africa, as defined on this map.
These are 22 countries, from Morocco in the North to Namibia in the South; the western part of South Africa should also be included.
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Catches by legal foreign fleets • Europe, China and Russia are the main contributors to total legal catches; • European catches are declining while Chinese and Russian catches increase. Pauly & Zellers (2016)
Catches by illegal foreign fleets • China is the main contributor to illegal catches today, the EU was the main contributor in the past; • China contribution to illegal catches increased. Pauly & Zellers (2016)
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Types of WA fish that enter illicit trade • • • • • •
Shrimp; Tuna; Snappers; Mackerel; Seabream; Yellow croaker.
Pauly & Zellers (2016); Liddick (2014)
Sumaila (2018)
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Channel for illicit trade in WA fish • The use of reefers and transshipments: – involves offloading catches from fishing boats onto large freezer and processing ships at sea; – Reefer activities account for about 16% of fish exported from West African waters and about 35 fishing reefers were seen in West African waters in 2013 (Daniels et al., 2016); – Most of these were operating under flags of convenience (Miller and Sumaila, 2014).
Sumaila (2018)
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Channel for illicit trade in WA fish • Through how fish is transported for exports: – It is estimated that about 84% of fish exported out of West Africa are transported in large refrigerated containers (Daniels et al., 2016); – According to these authors, the concern with this mode of transportation is that containers are generally subjected to less stringent reporting requirements.
Sumaila (2018)
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What to do – policies and actions to curb illicit trade? • Raise awareness among the public, policy makers, businesses, the judiciary, etc. about the negative economic, social and ecological effects of illicit trade; • Improve national, regional and continental fisheries policies and legislation; • Harmonize and enforce laws and codes of practice regarding illegal and illicit dealings in fishery resources.
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Thanks for your attention! and Thanks to CAPFISH for inviting me
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Day 1 | Presentation1
WMU-MOF-KMI CAPFISH Project Second Workshop 15-18 February 2022 World Maritime University, Malmö, Sweden
The history and role of FAO in combatting IUU Fishing Matthew Camilleri, Ph.D. Leader Fisheries Global and Regional Processes
Alicia Mosteiro Fisheries Officer Fisheries Global and Regional Processes
Development of International Instruments
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International Instruments and Guidelines
K. Arrigo
Responsible Fisheries Management
Sound fisheries management guarantees the long-term conservation and sustainable use of fisheries resources…. ….maintaining their diversity and availability for present and future generations
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The Fisheries Management Process
International law + policy and regional CMMs
Objective and Consideration Review Process
Urp
Implementation + Enforcement о Effective legal, administrative and institutional structures о Management actions о Reporting о Monitoring, Control and Surveillance о Management in partnership
Data Collection, Research and Analyses Fish stocks, ecology, environment, catch, effort, fishing operations, trade, processing, socio-economics etc.
I
Urp
Adoption of Fisheries Regulations - Technical measures rg - Catch Control - Capacity/Effort Control - Seasonal closures - Access Control - Post harvest and trade measures
U
I
Formulation of Fisheries Policy and Legislative Framework
I Formulation of Management Plans Multidisciplinary and stakeholder participation
I Matthew Camilleri, PhD
Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) Fishing
I
Fishing and fishing-related activities conducted in contravention of national and international law, including other international obligations
Urp
Non-reporting, misreporting or under-reporting of information on fishing operations and their catches
Urg
Fishing by “Stateless” vessels Fishing in convention areas of RFMOs by non-party vessels Fishing activities which are not regulated by States Fishing in areas or for fish stocks for which there are no conservation or management measures
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I
Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) Fishing
Found FFo o in n aalll types of fi h i and d occurs fisheries in all waters
Poses a serious threat to marine ecosystems and undermines efforts to manage fisheries sustainably and conserve marine biodiversity
Threatens the livelihoods of fishers and other stakeholders, and exacerbates malnutrition, poverty and food insecurity
Motivated by economic Mot gain aand may be associated with it organized crime and linked linke to indecent working con conditions and forms of slavery
Takes advantage of corrupt administrations and exploits weak management regimes
International fisheries instruments and tools to combat IUU fishing
168 parties UNCLOS
1982
#
42 parties *CA
#
1993
91 parties UN FSA
#
70 parties IPOA-IUU
Rome Declaration
*PSMA
2001
2005
2009
CCRF
1995
# Binding * FAO discharges Secretariat responsibilities
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#
VG-FSP
Global Record VG-CDS
VG-MFG
2014
2017
2018
VG-TS
Flag, Port, Coastal, Market State Responsibilities Port State
Flag State
Has the responsibility to: • implement effective measures to verify rify that foreign flagged vessels entering its ports have not engaged in IUU fishing or related activities • deny port entry or take other inspection / enforcement measures to prevent fish caught from IUU fishing from reaching the market
Has the responsibility to: • exercise effective jurisdiction and control over vessels flying its flag wherever they operate (in areas under national jurisdiction, in ABNJ and other States’ waters) • ensure that their flagged vessels comply with CMMs
Information-sharing and cooperation
Market State
Coastal State • •
Has the responsibility to: • prevent fish caught by vessels identified to have been engaged in IUU fishing being traded or imported • cooperate, including through RFMOs, to adopt multilaterally agreed trade-related measures (e.g. CDS) • improve transparency and ensure traceability of fish or fish products
Has the sovereign right to explore, exploit, conserve and manage the resources in areas under its national jurisdiction Has the responsibility to adopt and effectively implement appropriate measures to conserve and manage those resources
Combatting IUU Fishing • Strong political will and concerted action, including through RFMOs, by: • • • •
Flag States Port States Coastal States Market States
• Capacity and resources to: • Detect IUU fishing • Enforce regulations • Take action and prosecute
MCS Enforcement
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Connection between IUU Fishing and Crimes in the Fishery Sector FAO works closely with other UN agencies, including UNODC, IMO and ILO. FAO discharges joint Secretariat responsibilities for the FAO-IMO-ILO Working Group on IUU fishing and related matters
Other Inspection / Control Schemes
Fisheries MCS
IUU UU FFi Fishing hing ng Crimes C Cr Crim Cri rim im mes m es associated aasssociate ted ed with fisheries fis ish heriies with
Fish Fisheries-related herieseries--rel re elated ated issue ue es / crimes cr crim rimes issues (directly rectly connected connecte to fishing operations) operation operati
((not (n no n ott co o cconnected onneeccted ted to tte o fish fis fishing shing operations operaati op tion ons ns but butt ttake akke p lace within with hin tth he place the fish hing sector) ct fishing
Regional Fisheries Bodies
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Crime Surveillance / Control Schemes
Regional Fisheries Management Organizations
FAO discharges Secretariat functions for:
Regional Fisheries Advisory Bodies
• 4 RFMOs • 7 RFABs • Regional Fisheries Bodies Secretariats’ Network
RFMO Conservation and Management Measures (IUU fishing) % RFMOs that adopted the CMM (global: based on 14 RFMOs) 0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Record of authorised vessels IMO number requirements Measures against IUU vessels and nationals Maintenance of the IUU vessels list Cooperation with other RFMOs/organizations Standardized vessel tracking technologies Jurisdiction and control over vessels by member flag States Measures against vessels without nationality Inspection schemes requirements Port State measures and information exchange Transshipment regulations Regional observer schemes Requirements of developing States Trade related measures Catch documentation schemes
*As at 15.10.2020
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UN Sustainable Development Goals
Sustainable Development Goals
Target 14.4. By 2020, effectively regulate harvesting, and end overfishing, illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing and destructive fishing practices (…) to restore fish stocks (…) to levels that can produce maximum sustainable yield (…)
Target 14.6. By 2020, prohibit certain forms of fisheries subsidies which contribute to overcapacity and overfishing, eliminate subsidies that contribute to illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing (…)
Implementation of international fisheries instruments, mechanisms and tools directly contribute to achieving these Targets
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SDG Indicator 14.6.1 Progress in the degree of implementation of instruments to combat IUU fishing 2018 - 2020
2018
2020
World
Australia and New Zealand Europe and Northern America Northern Africa and Western Asia Latin America and the Caribbean Eastern and South-Eastern Asia Central and Southern Asia Oceania (excluding Australia and New Zealand) Sub-Saharan Africa
Least developed countries Small island developing States 0
1
2
Av. level of implementation: 1 lowest - 5 highest
Information Exchange
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3
4
5
FAO Global Information Exchange Systems
PSMA Information Exchange 1. PSMA Apps to share data on Designated Ports and National Contact Points (article 7 and 16) Currently: • 547 DSPs • 55 NCPs
2. Global Information Exchange System (GIES) (article 15 and 16) • •
Prototype presented at MoP3 Launch of GIES Pilot Phase on 15 Dec 2021
Global Record of Fishing Vessels, Refrigerated Transport Vessels and Supply Vessels Supporting the implementation of the PSMA and other instruments to combat IUU fishing: •
Verification of vessel and authorisation information
•
Risk analysis from historical and compliance information
•
Linkage between vessel and port State inspection information and results
•
Parties and non-parties to international instruments
•
Other surveillance information (Coastal State)
Preparations for launching GR v2 in 2022
FAO Global Record A collaborative global tool that gathers and disseminates through a unique access point, certified, relevant & up-to-date information on vessels used for fishing or in support of fishing activities. ¾ Goal: to combat IUU fishing through increased transparency and traceability ¾ Nature: a single hub for flag State fleet information (requested by COFI) ¾ Scope: all fishing and fishing-related vessels (transport, support and supply vessels): 1.
2.
That have an IMO number (as per IMO Resolution A.1117(3))
>K ш Ϯϰŵ
ϭϮŵ ш >K ф Ϯϰ ŵ ƚŚĂƚ ŽƉĞƌĂƚĞ ŝŶ ǁĂƚĞƌƐ ďĞLJŽŶĚ ŶĂƚŝŽŶĂů ũƵƌŝƐĚŝĐƚŝŽŶ
Whose products access international markets.
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FAO Global Record ¾ Content: •
5 Essential data fields
Six information modules (>100 data fields)
•
•
Provided by State’s relevant authorities
•
RFMOs have a role as channel of information
Five essential fields: minimum info required
Data providers / Information Modules
Flag State
Vessel Details (5 essential fields) Historical Details Authorisation Details Inspection & surveillance Port Entry Denial IUU listing
X X X
Coastal State
Port State
X X
UVI (IMO number) Current flag State Vessel name Length overall (LOA) GT or GRT
RFMO X X X X X X
X X
FAO Global Record Number of countries
% Vessels
35 31 35
Total no. of countries = 66
26
30 16
25
15
Total no. of vessels = 11,847 (< (<1/2 vessels with IMO numbers)
11
20
14 10
4
10
8
0 1
5
5
2 2
0 Africa
Vessel Type Fishing vessels 74%
Asia
Europe
Latin America & Caribbean
Near East
North America
Pacific
Vessel size (LOA)
Transport & Supply vessels 3%
ш Ϯϰ ŵ 71%
Not specified 23%
ф Ϯϰ ŵ͕ ш ϭϴ ŵ 27% ф ϭϴ ŵ 2%
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Capacity Development
Capacity Development for Combatting IUU fishing Policy and legislation
Training Institutional set-up and capacity
MCS and Operational procedures
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Countries supported under the Global Capacity Development Programme
Countries that have been/are being supported by the Capacity Development Programme (2016-2021) Additional countries likely to be supported by the Capacity Development Programme from 2021 Countries that have been recipients of national level seminars on the PSMA
Areas of Technical Support
CDS/traceability
5
PSMA seminars
5 7
MCS training
20
MCS support Legal training
23
Legal support
23 37
Needs assessment 0
5
10
15
20
Number of countries
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25
30
35
40
FAO Websites on combatting IUU Fishing IUU Fishing
PSMA
Thank You any questions?
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Global Record
Day 1 | Presentation2
WMU-MOF-KMI CAPFISH Project Second Workshop 15-18 February 2022 World Maritime University, Malmö, Sweden Matthew Camilleri, Ph.D.
The FAO Agreement on Port State Measures
Leader Fisheries Global and Regional Processes
Alicia Mosteiro Fisheries Officer Fisheries Global and Regional Processes
Objectives and Implementation
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Objectives of the PSMA
• First binding international agreement to specifically target IUU fishing • Main objective is to prevent, deter and eliminate IUU fishing by preventing vessels engaged in IUU fishing from using ports and landing their catches • Reduces the incentive of IUU fishing vessels to continue to operate • Blocks fisheries products derived from IUU fishing from reaching national and international markets
Status of the PSMA
Parties to the PSMA: 70 (including the EU) Non-Party Signatories to the PSMA: 3
Disclaimer: The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of FAO concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers and boundaries. Dashed lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement
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Implementation of PSMA
The Global Record of Fishing Vessels
MCS
Catch Documentation Schemes GIES
Detection and Investigation Action and Prosecution Reporting and notification
Putting the PSMA into Action Meeting of the Parties (MOP) to the PSMA MOP 1: Oslo, Norway, 29 – 31 May 2017 MOP 2: Santiago, Chile, 3 – 6 June 2019 MOP 3: Brussels, Belgium, 31 May – 4 June (Virtual) MOP 4: Bali, Indonesia, 8-12 May 2023
PSMA Regional Coordination Meetings Tentatively planned for Asia: 4-8 April 2022 Pacific: 9-13 May 2022 Caribbean/LA: June 2022 Africa: July 2022
PSMA Strategy ad hoc Working Group 1st meeting: tentatively November 2022, venue TBD
PSMA Open-Ended Technical Working Group on Information Exchange 1st meeting: London, United Kingdom, 16 – 18 April 2018 2nd meeting: Seoul, Korea, 15 – 17 May 2019 3rd meeting: Tentatively September 2022, venue TBD
PSMA Part 6 Working Group – Requirements of Developing States 1st meeting: Oslo, Norway, 1 – 2 June 2017 2nd meeting: Rome, Italy, 5 – 6 July 2018 3rd meeting: Santiago, Chile, 7 June 2019 4th meeting: tentatively November 2022, venue TBD
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Global Information Exchange System
Why is information sharing important?
FUNDAMENTAL ELEMENTS TO ELIMINATE IUU FISHING
KEY STEPS/PROCESSES
• Compliance
• Ratification/accession
• Cooperation
• Implementation + • Information sharing
• Transparency
Information exchange network Electronic
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Information Exchange PSMA Article 6 - Cooperation and exchange of information Article 7 - Designated Ports (DPs) Article 8 - Advance request for port entry Article 9 - Port entry, authorization or denial Article 15 – Transmittal of inspection results (Parties/States, RFMOs, FAO and IOs) Article 16 – Electronic exchange of information 1.
Info sharing mechanism coordinated by FAO
2.
Contact point (NCP)
3.
RFMOs to provide info on measures and decisions
Article 20 – Role of flag States Annex A – Information to be provided in advance by vessels requesting port entry Annex C – Report of the results of the inspection Annex D – Information systems of port State measures
PSMA GIES Parties at MOP2 and MOP3 • GIES as an integrated system • Modular and phased implementation approach • Work closely with RFMOs and other systems such as IMO GISIS, Equasis and Global Record • GIES to enter a pilot phase • Data protection, confidentiality & interoperability • Strengthen info exchange with relevant organizations at regional and international level
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GIES application • Components •
Denial of entry or use of port & withdrawal of port denials
•
Inspection report
•
Flag State actions
• Functionalities •
Manual online forms
•
Automated connection for near-real time exchange (GR, Nat.,Reg., Internat.)
•
Notifications (including non-Parties, as relevant)
•
Search functionality
• Accessibility •
Public: general information
•
Limited access: only Parties; summary information (risk analysis)
•
Full access: as per Article 15
The PSMA Global Information Exchange System Regional vessel records
National ational iinformation nfo orrm rmat systems ((FS) FS) systems
FAO Global Record Manual / Direct Input (FS)
Data / information access for GR (public) IHSMT
Crosscheck C ros ossc sch heckk information nformatio
SSummary Summ Su mmar mm aryy ar compliance ompliance an information in nformatio rmat ation
Flag State
National ationaall iin information nformaatti ti ssystems ystems ((PS) PS)
PSMA Global Information Exchange System (GIES) Manual / Direct Input (PS)
Regional e-PSM Systems NCPs
DPs
Data / information access for GIES (restrictions to be defined)
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Other relevant entities
FAO information exchange Flag State Port State
Standards
Linkages with RFMOs Linkages with other systems
Official contact points Procedures
Thank You any questions?
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Day 1 | Presentation3
WMU-MOF-KMI CAPFISH Project Second Workshop 15-18 February 2022 World Maritime University, Malmö, Sweden
ILO’s Role in the Fight Against IUU Fishing and the Work in Fishing Convention Part I – Labour issues in fishing, ILO, C188 Brandt Wagner Head Transport & Maritime Unit Sectoral Policies Department ILO, Geneva
Presentations will cover
X
Part I:
X
Main labour issues in commerical fishing
X
International Labour Organization (ILO)
X
Normative approach, international Standards
X
The ILO Work in Fishing Convention (C188) – history, contents
X
Part II:
X
ILO tools to concerning C188, experiences
X
ILO and IUU fishing
X
ILO fishing projects
X
Work with FAO, IMO, RFMOs and others
X
Going forward
Advancing social justice, promoting decent work
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39 million engaged in captures fisheries
Special considerations with respect to labour conditions in the fishing sector • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Marine environment Labour intensive Hazardous occupation Long periods at sea Fisher live and work on vessel Share system - self-employment Lack of written contracts Long working hours, fatigue Limited trade union representation Migrant labour Child labour Force labour and trafficking Declining resources, IUU, fisheries crime, transnational crime Piracy, arrest, abandonment
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Diversity in global fishing fleet 100 90
Percentage of world fleet
80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
< 12 m
12-23.9 m
ш Ϯϰ ŵ
Length of fishing vessel in metres
International Labour Organization
X
Specialized agency of the UN
X
Tripartite
X
Decent Work
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Normative approach: International labour standards • Conventions (and Protocol) – binding • Recommendations – guidance - Backed by the ILO supervisory system
International labour standards - all workers - specific issues - specific sectors
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Fundamental principles and rights at work (FPRW) – all workers: • • • •
Forced labour Child labour Discrimination Freedom of association and collective bargaining
2014 Protocol to the ILO Forced Labour Convention • strengthens the international legal framework by creating new obligations to prevent forced labour, to protect victims and to provide access to remedy, such as compensation for material and physical harm. • requires governments to take measures to better protect workers, in particular migrant laborers, from fraudulent and abusive recruitment practices and emphasizes the role of employers and workers in the fight against forced labour.
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History… ILO standards specifically for fishers
ILO Standards for seafarers Before 2000
over 60 Conventions and Recommendations some applied to shipping and fishing some could, after consultation, be applied to fishing
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Maritime Labour Convention, 2006
- Fishing vessels excluded!
Decision to consolidate and update ILO standards for the fishing sector
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Work in Fishing Convention, 2007 (No. 188) votes of 437 for, 2 votes against and 22 abstentions Accompanied by Work in Fishing Recommendation, No. 199
Preamble - Objective of C.188: Fishers have decent conditions of work on board fishing vessels with regard to: • • • •
minimum requirements for work; conditions of service; accommodation and food; occupational safety and health protection, medical care and social security.
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Preamble UNCLOS FPRW – but not in Articles
Scope “This Convention applies to all fishers fishersand all fishing vessels engaged in commercial fishing operations”
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Less stringent standards for smaller vessels or those at sea for less than three days.
Higher standards for large (24 m) or vessels remaining more than three days at sea.
24 m
Flexibility for different national situations Exclusion possibility Progressive implementation …………………………………………………………………..
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States shall… • Implement and enforce laws, regulations or other measures • Designate the competent authority or authorities and establish mechanisms for coordination among relevant authorities
Responsibilities of fishing vessel owners, skippers, fishers Fishing vessel owners • Ensure skippers are provided with the resources and facilities to comply with C.188. Skippers • Responsible for the safety of the fishers and the safe operation of the vessel. Fishers • Comply with the lawful orders of the skipper and applicable safety and health measures. - 62 -
Issues covered by C.188 9 Recruitment & placement of fishers 9 Minimum age 9 Medical examination 9 Hours of rest 9 Safe manning 9 Crew list 9 Fisher’s work agreement 9 Repatriation 9 Payment of fishers 9 Accommodation 9 Food and water 9 Medical care 9 Occupational safety & health 9 Social security 9 Protection in the case of work-related sickness, injury or death
Compliance and enforcement Flag State must exercise its jurisdiction and control over vessels that fly its flag by establishing a system for ensuring compliance with the requirements of this Convention… • Effective system for inspection and appoint a sufficient number of qualified inspectors • Certain vessels must carry a valid document stating the vessel has been inspected and complies with the Convention
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Complaints Port State control may inspect foreign vessels No more favourable treatment
Recommendation No. 199
• Not binding • Guidance • Role for coastal State 55. A Member, in its capacity as a coastal State, when granting licences for fishing in its exclusive economic zone, may require that fishing vessels comply with the requirements of the Convention. If such licences are issued by coastal States, these States should take into account certificates or other valid documents stating that the vessel concerned has been inspected by the competent authority or on its behalf and has been found to be in compliance with the provisions of the Convention. See related
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Ratification C. 188 so far • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • •
Bosnia and Herzegovina Argentina Morocco South Africa Congo France Norway Estonia Angola Lithuania
Denmark Namibia Netherlands Poland Portugal Senegal Thailand United Kingdom Antigua & Barbuda Kenya - 2022
Date of entry into force: 16 Nov 2017
27
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WMU-MOF-KMI CAPFISH Project Second Workshop 15-18 February 2022 World Maritime University, Malmö, Sweden
ILO’s Role in the Fight Against IUU Fishing and the Work in Fishing Convention Part II –Promotion of standards, ILO and IUU fishing Brandt Wagner Head Transport & Maritime Unit Sectoral Policies Department ILO, Geneva
ILO Conference resolutions … Action Plan for ratification
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PROMOTION OF INTERNATIONAL LABOUR STANDARDS
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Gap analysis matrix C.188 provision
R.199 provision
National law, reg or measure
Paper on use of flexibility clauses
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gap
How to fill gap
ILO supervisory system Committee of Experts on Application of Conventions and Recommendations
Flag and port State control guidelines - Adopted by tripartite meetings of experts
2011
2017
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The link betwee IUU and exploitive labour practices Global Dialogue Forum for the Promotion of the Work in Fishing Convention, 2007 (No. 188) – 2013 • IUU fishing … exacerbates exploitive labour practices, which may have a negative impact on wages and working and living conditions of all fishers. IUU fishing may also involve forced labour and human trafficking, and child labour • Convention No. 188 will put in place a system of flag and port State control inspection of working and living conditions on fishing vessels. This is an essential element of establishing decent working and living conditions for fishers, including migrant fisherd, and will also contribute to addressing other issues such as IUU fishing, forced labour and human trafficking and child labour.
DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION
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Adoption of Protocol of 2014 to Force Labour Convention has increased attention by the ILO on on forced labour and fishing
International expert meeting on labour exploitation in the fishing sector in the Atlantic region (Oslo, Nov 2015)
Led to the publication of the report Fishers First: Good practices to end labour exploitation at sea, which contributes to the discussion of the links between efforts to tackle IUU fishing and efforts to address labour abuse in the fishing sector.
Combatting Unacceptable Forms of Work in the Thai Fishing and Seafood Industry Objectives: 1. Legal and regulatory framework (based on Protocol of 2014, C.188 2. Labour inspection 3. Voluntary compliance initiatives 4. Empowered workers access, support services
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Thailand ratified C.188 and Protocol of 2014 to the Forced Labour Convention
SEA Fisheries: Strengthened Coordination to Combat Labour Exploitation and Trafficking in Fisheries in Southeast Asia
•
Outcomes and activities: – Establish regional coordination body to support existing national bodies to improve coordination in combating trafficking in fisheries sector – Coordinate Strategies and actions plan to support the adoption of result oriented regional action plan – Commission and conduct independent research and provide a platform for knowledge sharing and enhancing communication
Advancing social justice, promoting decent work
ILO training package on inspection of labour conditions on board fishing vessels • Overview of fishing sector, inspection issues, roles of relevant authorities (maritime, labour, fisheries, etc.
Experiences from member States
• Managers’ planning programme • Inspectors’ field training programme
Experiences from ILO projects
• Inspection of fundamental principles and rights at work • Pre-training mapping exercise • Annexes – tips for training, examples, etc.
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Upcoming – on-line training course
2022
Ship to Shore South East Asia - Promoting regular and safe labour migration among South East Asian countries in the fishing and seafood processing sectors
Objectives -Strengthen the legal, policy, and regulatory frameworks related to labour migration and labour standards, focusing on the fishing and seafood processing sectors in South East Asia. -Protect labour rights and promote safe and secure working environments for all migrant workers, from recruitment to the end of contract. -Empower migrant workers, their families, organizations, and communities to promote and exercise their rights.
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Accelerator Lab 8.7: Intensify action against forced labour and child labour through innovation • Identify initiatives and tools developed by ILO and other partners, including collective bargaining, that have proved to effectively address forced labour in the fishing sector. • Possible issues include: • Inclusion of labour rights and prevention of forced labour considerations into efforts to combat IUU fishing • Flag State’s responsibility to ensure respect of human and labour rights on board fishing vessels • Ability of (migrant) workers in the fishing sector to form and join trade unions and ability to bargain collectively • Developing an international mechanism for the repatriation of stranded crew
Global tool and protocols for detection of forced labour among fishers. • Description of obstacles to detection of forced labor in commercial fishing and the legal frameworks in which detection and enforcement regimes operate. • Elements of detection programmes for front-line actors in commercial fishers-labor inspectors, fisheries managers, coast guards and navies, unions and worker advocates, employer associations and seafood buyers, due diligence assessors, policymakers and researchers. • Global detection tool and protocols for adaptation and use by authorites and others coming into contact with fishers. • Variations on the tool and protocols for use by non-State actors including employers and their associations, workers and their organizations, and nongovernmental organizations, with training guide and teaching materials for inspectors (and other front-line actors) charged with detecting forced labor in fishing.
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11 indicators / red flags of forced labour • • • • • • • • • • •
Abuse of vulnerability Deception Restriction of movement Isolation Physical and sexual violence Intimidation and threats Retention of identity documents Withholding of wages Debt bondage Abusive working and living conditions Excessive overtime
Project on Preventing and Addressing Labor Violations in the Fishing Sector in Peru and Ecuador
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Tripartite meeting on migrant fishers 2017
UN inter-agency cooperation ILO participating in • • •
IMO Cape Town Agreement promotional events FAO PSMA promotional events FAO/ILO/IMO joint working group on IUU and related matters
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Some RFMOs include a social dimension in their license conditions: •
•
•
•
•
The Pacific Islands Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) introduced mandatory Crew Employment Conditions (broadly based on C.188) in its Harmonised Minimum Terms + Conditions (MTC) for Access by Fishing Vessels. The Southwest Indian Ocean Fisheries Commission (SWIOFC) did introduce a social dimensions in its conditions of access but on a voluntary basis (Guidelines on MTC for Foreign Fisheries Access in the SWIOFC Region). Accordingly, Member States should require that licensed foreign fishing vessels comply with C188 and that terms and conditions for employment of fishing crews are in line with relevant ILS! The International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) (4 of the 6 FCWC are also members of ICCAT) has recently adopted a groundbreaking resolution establishing a working group on labour standards, which will start to work in March this year. The Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC) adopted the in December 2018, and a working group is currently working on a draft conservation and management measure on safety and security for crew on fishing vessels, which draws on certain provisions o C188. The Fisheries Committee for the West Central Gulf of Guinea (FCWC/CPCO): ILO presented C.188 at the West African Task Force on IUU and at the FCWC Conference of Ministers in December 2021 and the FCWC Secretary-General encouraged Member States to ratify the Convention.
IOTC – Indian Ocean MOU: The JWG launched a collaboration programme between the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC) and the Indian Ocean MoU to explore synergies between the distinct PSC MOU and RFMO procedures, aiming to ensure: (i) not to step on each other’s toes, and (ii) even facilitate each other’s work. This project is to be expanded to other regions (synergy RFMOs-PSC MOUs).
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Way forward: Ratification and implementation of C. 188 Promote application of Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work in the fishing sector Ratification and implementation of the CTA, STCW-F and PSMA Awareness raising, capacity building
Improved coordination of efforts to address labour conditions, safety and IUU fishing at the international, regional and national levels
Thank you www.ilo.org/fishing
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Day 1 | Presentation4
WMU-MOF-KMI CAPFISH PROJECT – SECOND WORKSHOP The IMO’s role in the fight against IUU fishing and the 2012 Cape Town Agreement World Maritime University (WMU) Malmö – 15 February 2022 Sandra Rita Allnutt Head, Technology & Research and Development Cooperation Department of Partnerships and Projects
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Presentation topics Safety of fishing vessels IMO/FAO/ILO working together: non-mandatory instruments 1993 Torremolinos Protocol 2012 Cape Town Agreement FAO/ILO/IMO Joint Working Group on IUU Fishing Measures to be taken
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Safety of fishing vessels Lives lost ratio between merchant ships and fishing vessels It is very difficult to calculate the casualty rate of fishing vessels due to the lack of comprehensive international statistics The casualty rate of fishing vessels is more than 10 times higher than that of merchant ships
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Safety of fishing vessels Link between safety, IUU fishing and working conditions on board fishing vessels It has been recognized the link between safety, fight against Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing and working and living conditions on board. This is due to the fact that unscrupulous owners/operators neglecting safety standards tend to neglect other international requirements.
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IMO/FAO/ILO working together
The safety of fishermen and fishing vessels forms an integral part of the UN’s mandate
1962 – FAO, ILO and IMO started working together
Initial focus on development of the Code of Safety and the Voluntary Guidelines
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IMO/FAO/ILO working together In the 2000’s, IMO has developed/revised non-mandatory instruments, in cooperation with FAO and ILO, in addition to its effort to effect the 1993 Torremolinos Protocol •
Code of Safety for Fishermen and Fishing Vessels, 2005 Part A: Safety and health practice (for skippers and crew) All vessels Part B: Safety and health requirements for the construction and equipment of fishing vessels Vessels of 24 m in length and over
•
Voluntary Guidelines for the design, construction and equipment of small fishing vessels, 2005 12 m in length and over, but less than 24 m
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Safety recommendations for decked fishing vessels of less than 12 metres in length and undecked fishing vessels Less than 12 m in length YOUR LOGO
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Safety of fishing vessels Comparison of the scope of measures Scope of measures
Torremolinos
Code B
Guidelines
Recommendations
General provisions
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Construction, equipment
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Stability
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Machinery, electrical installations
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Fire protection and fire fighting
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Protection of the crew
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Life-saving appliances
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Emergency procedures, safety training
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Radio communications
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Navigational equipment
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Crew accommodation Manning, training & competence
;
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Safety of fishing vessels Implementation Guidelines •
IMO, recognizing the need to assist competent Authorities to implement part B of the Code of Safety for Fishermen and Fishing Vessels, the Voluntary Guidelines and the Safety Recommendations, instructed the SLF SubCommittee to prepare the draft Implementation Guidelines
•
The Implementation Guidelines on Part B of the Code, the Voluntary Guidelines and the Safety Recommendations was approved by MSC 89 in 2011, referred to FAO and ILO for concurrent approval
•
The Implementation Guidelines covers the development of a safety strategy, legal implications, administrative requirements, capacity-building, training of crew, enforcement of regulations and operational safety
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Torremolinos Protocol Torremolinos Protocol of 1993 relating to the Torremolinos International Convention for the Safety of Fishing Vessels, 1977 Adopted by the International Conference on Safety of Fishing Vessels (Torremolinos, Spain - 22 March to 2 April 1993) •
Establishment of the highest practicable standards for the safety of fishing vessels which can be implemented by all States concerned
•
Applies to fishing vessels of 24 m (in some cases 45 m) in length and over (new vessels, in principle)
•
For fishing vessels between 24 m and 45 m in length, regional agreements (or the Code of Safety) may apply
•
Entry-into-force requirements: 15 ratifications, aggregating 14,000 fishing vessels over 24 m
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Ratification: 17 States, approximately 3,000 vessels
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Torremolinos Protocol Contracting States to the 1993 Torremolinos Protocol Bulgaria
Kiribati
Croatia*
Liberia
Cuba
Lithuania
Denmark k*
Netherlands s*
France *
Norway y*
Germany y*
Saint Kitts and Nevis *
Iceland d*
Spain *
Ireland
Sweden
Italy * Contracting States to the 2012 Cape Town Agreement Page 10
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2012 Cape Town Agreement Cape Town Agreement of 2012 on the Implementation of the Torremolinos Protocol of 1993 relating to the Torremolinos International Convention for the Safety of Fishing Vessels, 1977 (the Agreement) Adopted by the International Conference on Safety of Fishing Vessels (Cape Town, South Africa, 9 to 11 October 2012) •
Agreement prepared in order to expedite the entry into force of the provisions of the 1993 Torremolinos Protocol
•
The Agreement will enter into force 12 months after the date on which not less than 22 States, the aggregate number of whose fishing vessels of 24 m in length and over operating on the high seas is not less than 3,600 vessels, have expressed their consent to be bound by it
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Agreement significantly lowered the number of vessels (14,000) required to bring the provisions of the 1993 Protocol into force
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A simplified acceptance procedure was included in the Agreement to support those party to the 1993 Protocol YOUR LOGO
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2012 Cape Town Agreement Cape Town Agreement of 2012 on the Implementation of the Provisions of the Torremolinos Protocol of 1993 relating to the Torremolinos International Convention for the Safety of Fishing Vessels, 1977 •
Amendments to the 1993 Torremolinos Protocol (main points) •
Administration may exempt vessels engaged solely in its exclusive economic zone (EEZ)
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the use of equivalence of length to gross tonnage
•
the concept of progressive implementation of the Protocol, that would give time for countries to prepare for the implementation of the provisions of the Protocol
•
other technical and legal issues YOUR LOGO
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2012 Cape Town Agreement Contracting States to the 2012 Cape Town Agreement Belgium
Iceland*
Congo
Netherlands*
Cook Islands
Norway*
Croatia*
Peru
Denmark*
Saint Kitts and Nevis*
Finland
Sao Tome and Principe
France*
Spain*
Germany*
South Africa
Aggregated number of fishing vessels of 24 m in length and over operating on the high seas equivalent to 1,907 * Contracting States to the 1993 Torremolinos Protocol
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Supporting the implementation of the 2012 Cape Town Agreement Regional Seminars and Assembly resolution
Since adoption the 2012 Cape Town Agreement, IMO has held a number of regional seminars, in cooperation with the FAO Secretariat
To date, regional seminars on the Implementation of the 2012 Cape Town Agreement have been held in Belize, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Indonesia, Morocco, Peru and South Africa
To further encourage ratification of the Cape Town Agreement, the IMO Assembly, at its twenty-ninth session, adopted resolution A.1107(29) to:
(1) urge Governments to consider accepting the 2012 Cape Town Agreement at the earliest possible opportunity; and
(2) invite Governments experiencing difficulties to becoming Parties to the Agreement to inform IMO so that consideration can be given to taking appropriate action in this respect, including providing necessary technical assistance YOUR LOGO
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Supporting the implementation of the 2012 Cape Town Agreement Ministerial Conference on Fishing Vessel Safety and Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing (Torremolinos, Spain, 21 to 23 October 2019)
Promote ratification of the 2012 Cape Town Agreement to strengthen safety and the global regulatory framework applicable to fishing activities
Address the impact illegal fishing has on the most vulnerable societies, the dangerous working conditions of fishers, the high number of fatalities in the fishing industry and the environment and how the 2012 Cape Town Agreement can address these and other issues
Educate on how the 2012 Cape Town Agreement and other FAO, ILO and IMO instruments can assist States and international organizations in achieving their goals and objectives on fishing related matters, including the establishment of a harmonized regime to exercise control over foreign flagged fishing vessels and better collection of data related to the fishing sector
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Supporting the implementation of the 2012 Cape Town Agreement Torremolinos Declaration
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Supporting the implementation of the 2012 Cape Town Agreement Torremolinos Statement The resolution:
Called on States to ratify the Cape Town Agreement
Urged States to take actions to prevent, deter and eliminate IUU fishing
Encouraged States to ratify and promote the STCW-F Convention on training of fishing vessel personnel
Called upon FAO, ILO and IMO to continue to work together in the fishing sector
Requested IMO to continue to provide technical assistance to States who request it in order to accede to and implement the Agreement
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Supporting the implementation of the 2012 Cape Town Agreement Regional webinars on fishing vessels safety
Provide a platform to get more insight into the Cape Town Agreement and share lessons learned from States that have already ratified the Agreement, or are currently in the process of doing so
Help to identify any barriers that hinder progress towards the widespread acceptance and effective implementation of the Agreement
Webinars: -
Latin America and Caribbean Region (23 and 24 November 2020)
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Africa Region (23 and 24 February 2021)
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North Africa and Middle East (13 and 14 April 2021)
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Europe and Western Asia (21 and 22 June 2021)
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Pacific Region (22 and 23 July 2021)
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Asia (19 and 20 October 2021)
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Europe (27 January 2022)
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Timeline for the entry into force of international safety provisions for fishing vessels
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IUU Fishing 4th FAO/ILO/IMO Joint Working Group on IUU Fishing and other related matters (Torremolinos, Spain – 23 to 25 October 2019) Recommendations: •
Promote and support the development of ways to increase coordination and information sharing for inspection procedures at national level
•
Share information and experience for a potential integrated capacity-building and technical cooperation programme on IUU fishing and on promotion of relevant international instruments
•
Issues of abandonment and fair treatment of seafarers, be extended to include fishers YOUR LOGO
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IUU Fishing (cont…) 4th FAO/ILO/IMO Joint Working Group on IUU Fishing and other related matters (Torremolinos, Spain – 23 to 25 October 2019) Recommendations: •
Having noted the IMO Action Plan on marine plastic litter from ships, FAO and ILO members and observers to forward relevant views to IMO
•
With regard to the allocation of IMO numbers to fishing vessels, consider taking appropriate action for effective allocation of the numbers •
Resolution A.1117(30) – IMO Ship Identification Number Scheme (extend the IMO number scheme to fishing vessels of steel and non-steel hull construction over 100 gross tonnage and above YOUR LOGO
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IUU Fishing (cont…) 4th FAO/ILO/IMO Joint Working Group on IUU Fishing and other related matters (Torremolinos, Spain – 23 to 25 October 2019) Recommendations: •
IMO consider developing guidance to assist competent authorities in the implementation of the Cape Town Agreement of 2012 •
A draft guidance is in development by a group of interested parties (Canada, China, Iceland, Indonesia, Philippines, Republic of Korea, South Africa, Spain, United States, FAO, ILO, ITF, Pew and WMU) for consideration and decision of the Maritime Safety Committee YOUR LOGO
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Conclusions: measures to be taken Introduction of international mandatory framework:
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The STCW-F Convention, 1995;
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ILO Work in fishing Convention 2007 (No.188);
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FAO Port State Measures Agreement; and
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The 2012 Cape Town Agreement
2
Implementation of various instruments, by Administrations and/or Competent Authorities as well as by industry/industry organizations, in cooperation with FAO, ILO and IMO
3
Technical Cooperation activities should be strengthened: regional and national seminars, capacity building and training YOUR LOGO
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Thank you for your attention
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www.imo.org - 90 -
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Day 1 | Presentation5
WMU-MOF-KMI CAPFISH PROJECT – FIRST WORKSHOP Design aspects of FV. Importance of ratifying the CTA 2012 to provide design standards and an inspection regime from a flag State point of view World Maritime University (WMU) Malmö / 15-18 February 2022
Miguel Nunez-Sanchez (PhD) HoU Reg. Affairs & International Cooperation Ministry of Transport Spain
Post Doc Researcher CEHINAV Universidad Politécnica deLOGO Madrid YOUR
Presentation topics
Main dimensions L vs GT Application CTA 2012 Chapters
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Main Dimensions Length between perpendiculars (L) and Length overall (LOA)
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Main Dimensions Tonnage (GT) Indicates the overall size of the ship and it is a function of the moulded volume of ALL enclosed spaces
Net tonnage indicates the useful capacity of the ship
Gross registered tonnage (GRT) represents the total internal volume of cargo vessels (It is a national measure). YOUR LOGO
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Application of the CTA 2012 Application The equivalence length to tonnage moves the threshold away to larger ships
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Application of the CTA 2012 Regional Implementation Since the trigger for the implementation of the technical Provisions of the CTA of 2012 is mainly 45 m article 3.5 encourages to develop technical standards from 24 to 45 m L
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Application of the CTA 2012 Regional Implementation Regional regulations have been amended to include other elements such as AIS, IMO, Number etc…
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CTA 2012
Why do we need this? CTA 2012 provides minimum design standards and an inspection regime at a worldwide level. Without this the implementation of a regulatory regime is just to the national administrations, which probably will not have the capacity to develop them
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CTA 2012 CTA 2012 contains 10 Chapters
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter I N(new) /(and) E(existing) FV from 24 mL Certificate 4+1 to 5 years - Accident investigation, go to Article 7 - IMSAS doesn’t apply - IMO Number is not required in CTA2012
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter lI. Construction N FV from 24 m L
Steel Water/weathertightness - Lack of Load line assignment Key in the design also for ILO 188 Rec 199
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter lII. Stability. N FV from 24 m L
A.749 (18) Maximum operating draft Ice accretion Damage Stability from 100 m L
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter lV. Machinery and electrical installations, unattended machinery spaces unattended N FV from 24 m L
Includes refrigeration Systems Bilge Pumping Unattended machinery is many times essential
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter V. Fire protection, detection and extinction. N from 45 m L
IF, IIF, IIIF Requirements below 60 and from 60 m L Key in the design also for ILO 188 Rec 199
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter VI. Protection of the crew. N from 24 m L
A FV is a working boat where crew needs to be safe on deck all the time.
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter VII. Life saving appliances and arrangements. Mainly N from 45 m L (portable VHF provision for N/E from 24 m L)
Standards for LSA contained in the CTA 2012 Reduced capacity in life rafts from 200% to 150%. It is key to provide capacity to maintain the equipment YOUR LOGO
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter VIII. Emergency procedures, musters and drills. N/E from 24 m L ISM doesn㼿t apply to FV Safety Culture is a problem in this sector
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter IX. Radiocommunications N/E from 45 m L
Exemption Language as an issue for the operators (GOC)
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CTA 2012 Chapters Chapter X. Navigational Equipment and Arrangements N/E from 24 m L
SOLAS V vs CTA 2012 No Minimum Safe manning provided in the CTA 2012
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CTA 2012 and PSC CTA 2012 should a relevant instrument for PSC, together with the main conventions for Industrial FV. Tonnage MARPOL ILO 188 STCW-F And with suitable links with PSMA
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Thank you for your attention
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mnunez@mitma.es
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Day 2 | Presentation1
Fighting IUU fishing An OECD perspective on policy priorities
Claire Delpeuch, OECD Trade and Agriculture Directorate WMU-MOF-KMI CAPFISH Workshop on IUU fishing Wednesday, 20 October, 2021
1
Presentation outline
I. The OECD Fisheries Committee (COFI) II. Why focus on IUU fishing? III. Supporting adoption of best policies & practices against IUU fishing IV. Eliminating support to IUU fishing V. Supporting the role of RFMOs during the COVID-19 pandemic
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The OECD Fisheries Committee (COFI) Overview • Established in 1961 • 38 member countries & 7 partner economies, accounting for 53% of marine capture and 35% of fish commodities consumption Objectives of the COFI • OECD focus on ‘Better policies for better lives’ • Help governments establish good policies to achieve environmentally sound fisheries and sustainable aquaculture that support resilient communities, provide quality food and secure livelihoods • Contribute to a more robust evidence base for policy making • Evidence-based analysis and peer-learning ¾ Biennial flagship report: the OECD Review of Fisheries 3
A unique set of data and indicators ¾ Policy recommendations are based on data reported by governments
FAO
Fisheries performance • Socio-economic indicators: value of landings, employment, trade, fleet • Fish stock status indicators : biological situation + objectives such as maximising catch volume Fisheries management • Management tools: use of Total Allowable Catch limits (TAC) + other output & input controls (fishing closure period, capture size control) • IUU indicators: use of internationally-recognised best practices Fisheries support • Fisheries Support Estimate (FSE) database and indicators • Direct support to fishers (based on income, input use) + Financing of services to the sector (infrastructure, marketing, promoting, R&D, MSC)
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4
Why focus on IUU fishing?
Damaging techniques and targeting of endangered species harm marine resources & ecosystems
IUU fishing weakens governments’ capacity to manage fisheries sustainably
Pressure on fish stocks resulting from IUU fishing harms law-abiding fishers through unfair competition
IUU fishing threatens food security by diverting fish away from local markets and regions that depend on them
IUU fishing often endangers fishers as part of transnational crimes (human rights abuse, corruption, trafficking)
The fight against IUU fishing is central to fisheries management and international cooperation Æ SDG 14 Æ WTO negotiations Æ Priority for RFMOs
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The status of assessed fish stocks ¾ In 2019, among 1 119 individual stocks reported by 30 countries and economies, 23% of stocks were in unfavorable condition % assessed stocks
Biological status
100 90 80
Undetermined Undetermined
Unfavourable Unfavourable
70 60 50 40 30
Favourable Favourable
20 10 0
6
Source: OECD Review of Fisheries 2020
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Best policies & practices to fight IUU fishing The OECD IUU indicators Vessel registration by which countries collect and publicise information on vessels operating in their exclusive economic zone (EEZ) or flying their flag Authorisation to operate in the EEZ by which countries, as coastal states, regulate fishing and fishing-related operations in their EEZ Authorisation to operate outside the EEZ by which countries, as flag states, regulate the operations of vessels flying their flag in ABNJs and in foreign EEZs Port state measures by which countries monitor and control access to and activities at port Market measures by which countries regulate how products enter the market and flow through the supply chain and economically discourage IUU fishing International co-operation by which countries engage in regional and global information sharing and joint activities against IUU fishing
Based on a survey asking respondents whether they had regulation in place to deter, identify and punish IUU fishing and how well it was implemented in 2018. Focusing on key elements of regulation as outlined in international agreements such as FAO IPOA-IUU.
The survey covered 27 OECD Member countries & 6 partner economies
Australia Belgium Canada Chile Colombia Costa Rica Denmark Estonia France Germany Greece Ireland Italy Japan Korea Latvia Lithuania
Mexico Netherlands New Zealand Norway Poland Slovenia Sweden Turkey United Kingdom United States Argentina China (People's Republic of) Chinese Taipei Indonesia Thailand Viet Nam
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7
Uptake of best policies and practices against IUU fishing, 2018 Vessel registration 1 0.9 0.8 0.7
Authorisation to operate in the EEZ
0.6
International co-operation
0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0
Authorisation to operate outside the EEZ
Market measures
Port measures All respondents (average) OECD countries (average)
All respondents (max) Emerging economies (average)
All respondents (min) 9
Areas of progress – Port State Measures ¾ Most notable of progress sinceof2005 Most notable areaarea of progress : adoption Port: State Measures 2018
2005
The port state measures of relevant RFMOs are adopted and implemented Targets are set for port inspections A risk-based approach is taken to prioritise inspections Vessels suspected of IUU fishing can be denied access to port Foreign vessels need to request port entry in advance Ports for use by foreign vessels are designated 0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1
Average score
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10
Other areas of progress
Progress in registration and authorisation processes •
While only 57% of respondents required fishing vessels to be registered in 2005, all did so in 2018
•
While in 2005, only 36% of respondents prohibited parallel registration of vessels in more than one country, 93% did so in 2018
Progress on some market measures •
While in 2005 only 38% of respondents reported they could reject products originating from IUU fishing at the border, all did so in 2018
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Areas for improvement – Vessel registration ¾ Registration is required universally but there remains scope for improvement:
UVI
• Vessel change flags or names to escape global oversight • Assigning vessels a unique, verified, permanent identifiers (such as the IMO number) can facilitate vessel monitoring, control and surveillance • 24% of countries surveyed did not require an IMO number to register fishing vessels
Beneficial Owner
• Hard to find the people who ultimately control & benefit from vessel activities • Collection of information on beneficial owner during registration is crucial • 36% of respondents have no legal provisions to collect information on beneficial owners of vessels + many report difficulties in implementing them
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Areas for improvement – Transparency ¾ Information on vessels is often not publicly available in spite of its importance for monitoring activities
List of domestic vessels found to engage in IUU fishing
List of vessels authorized to conduct fishing-related created activities in the high seas
19% 24% 22%
59%
fully publicized partially publicized no regulation
64%
12%
fully publicized partially publicized no regulation
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Areas for improvement – The regulation of fishing-related activities ¾ Fishing-related activities remain in a blind spot due to weaker regulation
What are they?
• Transshipment of fish or provision of fishing inputs between fishing vessels and cargo vessels at sea to reduce fishing cost and time
Why they are important?
• Pervasive in the high seas but hard to monitor • Easily co-mingle IUU and non-IUU caught fish, which blurs traceability and hides different illegal practices
How they are managed?
• In 21% of surveyed countries, fishing related activities in the high seas are not conditional on obtaining an authorisation • In 24% of surveyed countries, reporting of transshipment is not mandatory
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Areas for improvement – Market measures ¾ Market measures aim to • Lower the benefits from IUU fishing • Increase the financial risks associated with IUU fishing by closing their access to the market ¾ But some measures are not yet universally used – e.g. cutting public support to IUU fishing Measure is in use
Measure should be used but is not fully implemented
Measure is not used
Measure is not applicable
Seafood imports must have a certificate of origin IUU products can be rejected at the border Imports from countries insufficiently fighting IUU fishing can be restricted Campaigns are led to raise awarness on IUU Co-operation is mandated between tax and fisheries authorities IUU is considered as a predicate offence to money laundering Public support can be cut for operators convicted of IUU fishing 0
20
40
60
80
100 % respondents
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Eliminating support to IUU fishing and fishing-related activities
• Lowering net profits from IUU fishing is key to progress in the fight against it
Why is it important?
Long standing objectives
• Need to prevent public resources being used to support illegal activities • Support to illegitimate practices can undermine the credibility of the fisheries sector • (2001) FAO voluntary IPOA-IUU called on countries to avoid support to IUU fishing • (2002) The draft plan for the World Summit on Sustainable Development refers the IPOA-IUU objective • (2015) UN SDG 14 calls for eliminating and prohibiting support to IUU fishing in Target 14.6 • On-going objective of WTO negotiations on fisheries subsidies
Æ However, at the end of 2020, over 40% of the economies covered in the OECD Review of fisheries 2020 reported not having or implementing regulation to restrict support to IUU fishing 16
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Eliminating support to IUU fishing and fishing-related activities – Possible ways forward ¾ Conditions related to vessel registration & authorisation from subsidising country ¾ Explicit mechanisms to exclude all potential recipients of support linked to IUU activities from all types of support + mechanism to recover past support where relevant ¾ Comprehensive and actionable definitions of IUU fishing and IUU fishing-related activities in national legislations ¾ Enhanced monitoring to better detect and sanction IUU fishing ¾ Information-sharing within and between government agencies, between and with RFMOs ¾ Increased transparency on fisheries support recipients ¾ Re-purposing of support away from policies that have the most potential to increase fishing effort and capacity and consequently drive higher levels of IUU fishing 17
RFMOs & the fight against IUU fishing amid COVID-19 The COVID-19 has led to reduced MCS capacity among RFMOs to fight IUU fishing: • Over 2/3 of RFMOs have reduced in-person/on-board observation of vessels – e.g. pacific tuna fisheries • Disturbances to regular decision-making reported by almost all RFMOs Æ Highlights structural needs for improved decision-making and resilient MCS capacity RFMOs can better combat IUU fishing through: • Uptake of remote monitoring technologies (e.g. satellite data) • Improve procedures for the use and sharing of data (including mutual recognition of IUU vessel lists) • Co-ordination in data collection processes and standards
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Find out more about our work
Read the OECD Review of Fisheries 2020 Download associated Country Notes Read the policy brief COVID-19 and multilateral fisheries management Contact us tad.contact@oecd.org @OECDagriculture #OECDFishReview
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Day 2 | Presentation2
Socio-economic Considerations of IUU Fishing and Implementing Effective Counter Measures
A Presentation at: WMU-MOF-KMI CAPFISH Project First Workshop 15-18 February 2022 World Maritime University, Malmö, Sweden
© Andrew Baio, PhD Professor (Aquatic Resource Economics & Governance) University of Sierra Leone
Layout Statements to set the stage 1.
Definition (wide-ranging impact of IUU fishing)
2. a. Social considerations in IUU fishing b. Economic consideration in IUU fishing (Value chain approach) 3. Counter measures (International instruments; Additional counter measures) 4. Concluding remark
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A couple of opening statements 1. IUU fishing does not only take place at the fish capture node of the fish value chain. Rather, it is pervasive across the entire value chain which warrants a value chain approach to socio-economic and environmental impact assessment. 2. You do not have to be a fishing operator to be culpable of engaging in IUU fishing. If for example, your food preference serves as an incentive to the operator to engage in IUU fishing, you are equally culpable. Or if you purchase illegally acquired products, then you are an accomplice liable to punishment under the law. 3. The bio-physical, social and economic considerations of the impact of IUU fishing should not be done in isolation. But rather, the triangulation of the 3 perspectives provides a more wholesome treatment of the concept in order to capture the diversity of forms it could take and the wide-ranging impacts it could have on the environment and societal wellbeing.
1. Definition IUU Fishing is the failure to adhere to formal rules and regulation in the fisheries sector. Kuperan and Sutinen, (1998) termed it “Blue Crime”. Another dimension is that, such criminal activities have the inclination of being associated with other illegal commodities, like drugs, arms, and human trafficking. The corruption – IUU fishing nexus which explores the linkages between institutional corruption at all levels (international, regional & national) and fisheries crimes, depicts the pervasiveness of the menace - found in all sorts and scopes of fisheries occurring on the high seas and or in national waters across the fish value chain The High Seas Task Force (2006) - has been unequivocal about the ills of IUU Fishing in these words - “IUU fishing is detrimental to the wider marine ecosystem because it flouts rules designed to protect the marine environment which includes restrictions to harvest juveniles, closed spawning grounds and gear modification designed to minimise bycatch on non-target species. In so doing, they reduce the availability of an invaluable protein source for some of the world’s most impoverished communities and enfeeble the livelihoods of millions of fishermen; incursions by trawlers into the inshore areas reserved for artisanal fishing can result in collision with local fishing boats, destruction of fishing gear and deaths of fishermen.”
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FAO’s International Plan of Action on IUU Fishing (IPOAIUU), Describes IUU fishing as follows (High Seas Task Force 2006): Illegal fishing refers to activities: 1. Conducted by national or foreign vessels in waters under the jurisdiction of a State, without the permission of that State, or in contravention of its laws and regulations; 2. Conducted by vessels flying the flag of States that are parties to a relevant regional fisheries management organisation but operate in contravention of the conservation and management measures adopted by that organization and by which the States are bound, or relevant provisions of the applicable international law; or 3. In violation of national laws or international obligations, including those undertaken by cooperating States to a relevant regional fisheries management organisation.
Unreported fishing refers to fishing activities: 1. Which have not been reported, or have been misreported, to the relevant national authority, in contravention of national laws and regulations 2. Undertaken in the area of competence of a relevant regional fisheries management organisation which have not been reported or have been misreported, in contravention of the reporting procedures of that organisation. Unregulated fishing refers to fishing activities: 1. In the area of application of a relevant regional fisheries management organisation that are conducted by vessels without nationality, or by those flying the flag of a State not party to that organisation, or by a fishing entity, in a manner that is not consistent with or contravenes the conservation and management measures of that organisation 2. In areas or for fish stocks in relation to which there are no applicable conservation or management measures and where such fishing activities are conducted in a manner inconsistent with State responsibilities for the conservation of living marine resources under international law.”
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Some Estimates Estimation of IUU is difficult due to the fugitive nature of the practice. However, a number of estimates have been made. MRAG (2005) puts the global estimate of IUU catches at 16 million tonnes in 2002 (roughly 20% of global catch) valued between US$2.4 and $9.5 billion. Agnew et al. (2009) indicate that at least 20 % of seafood worldwide is caught illegally representing estimated economic losses of between US$10 and $23 billion and an effective catch forfeit of between 11 and 25 million metric tons of fish per year. Another estimate of the economic scale of global pirate fishing is US$ 9 billion (Stop Illegal Fishing, 2008). Pauly and Zeller (2015) catch reconstructions reports that although FAO fisheries statistics suggest an increase in global marine fisheries catches to 86 million tonnes in 1996, followed by a slight decline, actual catches may have peaked at 130 million tonnes, with a much stronger subsequent decline. The inference made in this document is that the 51 % shortfall in FAO statistics is due to IUU fishing, although this amount cannot necessarily be readily recouped for the economic benefits of fishing nations and coastal states.
Forms of IUU fishing The following forms of IUU fishing which may not be exhaustive and varies from one region to another: • Fishing without an observer on board. • Failing to operate a vessel monitoring system • Fishing endangered species. • Taking fish in excess of quota. • Using prohibited gear and methods including use of explosives and poison. • Illegal transshipment. • Unauthorised fishing in closed areas/seasons. • Illegal fishing by foreign vessels. • Fishing with false licenses or vessel registration. • Non-reporting/misreporting of catches. • Landing in unauthorised ports. • Incorrect description of exports • Illegal life history stage, juvenile capture
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IUU fishing and small-scale fisheries Small-scale fisheries operators do engage in subversive activities which must be discouraged in the fight against IUU fishing. Some of these practices include: x x x x x x x x x
Use of explosives in fishing Use of poison in fishing Destructive fishing gears (small meshes) Targeting Juveniles Unregistered crafts evading taxes Fishing on breeding grounds in sheltered areas Poorly reported statistics and ecological impact Child labour in fisheries Drug and contraband trafficking
2a. Socio-economic considerations of IUU fishing Social Impact The focus is on changes brought about by IUU fishing impacting on livelihoods as well as interactions with the socio-cultural, economic and biophysical surroundings. Vanclay (2003:4) suggested a list of variables for social impact assessment applicable to the evaluation of social impact of IUU fishing : x x x x
People’s way of life - that is, how they live, work, play and interact with one another on a day to-day basis; Their food security and livelihoods - the availability and quality of the food they eat, their ability to pursue their livelihoods Their culture and cultural heritage - that is, their shared beliefs, customs, customary practices, kinship ties, values, and language or dialect; Their community structure and organisation - its cohesion, stability, character, organisational integrity;
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Social Impact Contd. x Gender relations - how men and women interact, the roles they play in the home and community, the division of labour, access to and distribution of resources and power dynamics that exist between them; x Their political and governance systems - the extent to which people are able to participate in decisions; the level of interaction with and support from government, the quality of local and customary governance systems; and the resources provided for governance interactions; x x
Their environmental quality - the quality of the environment including the air, water, soils, that people use and the level of hazard or risk they are exposed to; Their health and wellbeing - includes physical, mental, social and spiritual wellbeing, their access to basic services such as water and sanitation, their control over resources, satisfaction with their quality of life;
Social Impact Contd. x
Their safety and security - that includes personal safety and living free from threats and dangers that may harm them or expose them to risk;
x
Their human rights - any infringement on human rights which may include a violation of their civil liberties; Their property rights - particularly whether people are economically affected, or experience personal disadvantage Their fears and aspirations - their perceptions about their safety, their fears about the future of their community, and their aspirations for their future and the future of their children
x x
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Table 1. Key social dimensions and impacts of IUU fishing Social Dimension Food security and nutrition
Employment
Local livelihoods
Women and gender relations
Social Impact Detrimental impacts on fish stocks, habitats as well as safety issues, reduces the availability and increases prices of a critical source of food and nutrition especially to local fishing communities reliant on marine resources. Decline in fish stocks and fish habitats due to IUU fishing (less fish for domestic fishers both commercial and artisanal) as well as the direct and indirect economic losses in all fishery sectors leads to layoff of crews and in some cases closure of related fishing enterprises (processing plants, shops, women traders) with resultant job losses.
IUU fishing through overexploitation of certain species and safety issues may lead to impacts on fishing livelihoods and consequent reduction in household incomes and therefore exacerbates poverty. Reduced fish may lead to conflicts in communities and emergence of local powerful individuals/groups that “capture” the resources from the broader community Reduced quantity of fish being landed affect women in several ways including their ability to secure nutritious food for the family, obtain income for other household necessities, their ability to work and earn a living
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Health and safety
Human rights abuses
Conflicts at sea especially where commercial vessels (legal and Illegal) encroach into the artisanal zone leading to damage to vessels, injury and even death. Injuries and death of fishers have devastating consequences on poor fishing households. These include no safety equipment on board, poor working and living conditions including poor accommodation, food and hygiene conditions. Forced child labour, human trafficking and prostitution are also linked to IUU fishing.
Adapted from (Vanclay 2003:4; AU-IBAR 2016, 94)
2b. Economic considerations of IUU fishing Economic impacts Economic impacts of IUU fishing goes over and above yearly losses of fishing opportunity by fishing nation to encompass e.g., lost port fees, port handling income, license fees, fuel sales, dumping into certain markets, negative impacts on product branding due to the entry of poor quality product into the market, market sanctions for product from known locales affected by IUU activity, increased harvest costs for legal operators, losses of taxation income for the state, confusion in scientific processes, downstream economic multiplier effects, and impacts on tourism due to coastal habitat degradation. Consequently, a value chain approach to economic impact assessment of IUU fishing would enable the discernment of hitherto undetected economic losses from IUU fishing.
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The Concept of Value Chain We adopt Kaplinsky’s (2000, 121) portrayal of value chain as ‘the full range of activities which are required to bring a product or service from conception, through the different phases of production (involving a combination of physical transformation and the input of various producer services), delivery to final consumers, and final disposal after use’. The fish value chain encompasses the gamut of activities from acquisition of access to fisheries resources onto disposal of product by marketing (as specified in Table 2) - contrary to restrictive representations wherein, the fish chain is “from catching to consuming fish” (e.g. Kooiman 2008, 171).
Table 2. Nodes of the fish value chain and key economic dimensions/impacts of IUU fishing Node of the fish value chain Access to fisheries resources arrangements
Description of value chain nodes
Economic dimension/impact of IUU fishing Investigate the extent to which Institutional corruption at the access arrangements are transparent international, regional and national and devoid of corruption levels as it relates to “use or overuse of community natural resources with the consent of a state agent by those not legally entitled to it” (cf. Robbins (2000 425). Issues of license undervaluation etc. Exporting overcapacity from the North to the South in access agreements, threatens food security and undermines developing world economies due to the fact that payments to access foreign waters greatly undervalue the resource. (Kaczynski & Fluharty 2002)
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Productive Examine nature of ownership/use of capital input supply productive capital inputs and implications for economic drain on coastal host nations
Fish capture
Subsidised inputs used by distant water fleets in host countries reduces the cost of fisheries operation both in terms of capital and operational cost; provides an incentive for fishers to increase their catch and profit, with an aggregate impact to further stimulate effort and compound resource overexploitation problems (Milazzo, 1998). European foreign catch reduction in African EEZ could be attributed to reflagging of EU vessels in joint venture vessels arrangements to African national flag vessels. Such a misleading strategy is used by the foreign catch countries to avoid paying the legal and fair license fees in African EEZ (Nyameke 2021). Capital flight to largely foreign input owners
Examine the product legality from the act of extraction of fish from the water body as well as process/activities social, economic and environmental impact
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Economic loss and environmental degradation from fishing without the permission of that State, or in contravention of its laws and regulations. Failure to report or misreporting fishing activities in contravention of State laws. Unregulated fishing without reference to State conservation responsibilities (FAO 2001; High Seas Task Force 2006). Increased cost of harvesting by lawful operators
Catch acquisition
Examine the various arrangements/typology of catch acquisition and implications for economic drain on host nation
Corruption in relation to landing obligations, payment of royalties. “Transshipment has become an intensely debated issue as one of the potential loopholes in global fisheries management. Transshipment is widely used in a number of fisheries to reduce operating costs and maximize fishing opportunities. Transshipment operations, particularly those occurring at sea, are difficult to monitor and control. Therefore, transshipment can become an entry point for catches originating from IUU fishing activities into the market” (FAO 2020, 112). Issues of lost port fees, port handling income, license fees, fuel sales.
Fish handling and processing
Examine fish handling measures and the issue of meeting official control standards.
Disposal of product by marketing
Investigate activities involved in getting finished products to consumer and the interactions therein
Redundant fish handling and processing factories/plants due to dwindling catch from the impact of IUU fishing. Loss of employment/income especially among womenfolk who dominate post-harvest in developing countries. Loss of revenue from failure to meet official control standards. Circumventing official control standards by using 3rd country for fish export with loss to the country. Transshipment at sea, smuggling fish to avoid taxes. Unreported and underreported catch. Impact of product dumping on domestic price. Unavailability of catch and the economic impact on women.
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Motivations/incentives for perpetration of IUU fishing Socio-economic motivations/incentives are major causative push factors for engaging in IUU fishing activities. IUU fishing offence is committed if the expected benefit from IUU fishing is greater than the expected cost. Thus, IUU fishing would be undertaken if the potential benefits from IUU (such as potential fish catch is high; high fish price and easy access to state ports) is greater than the potential cost of engaging in IUU fishing (such as low detection likelihood; low levels of fines when apprehended and low cost of avoidance behaviour). Subsidies to fisheries for e.g. vessel acquisition and fuel, reduces the real costs of fishing and enable fishing to continue beyond the level at which it would have otherwise been unprofitable.
Motivations/incentives Contd. Pervasive corruption in an economy would easily find a foothold in fisheries where there are many opportunities for government officials to use their authority for providing services to interest groups in fisheries for personal gains. Lack of fishing harbour is a great chance for fishing operators to engage in IUU fishing as transshipment is done at the open sea and inspections are infrequent. Low salaries of observers make them susceptible to bribery. Weak MCS systems embolden violators as the probability of detection would be reduced. Supply–side interventions focus on market demands that enhances sales (cf. Gelli et al. 2020). It is thus not surprising that because of preference for the juvenile of certain species, fishing operators engage in IUU fishing by using small mesh sizes in violation of regulations to harvest juveniles
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3.0. Effective counter measures The counter measures to curb IUU fishing involves taking actions to increase the cost of engaging in IUU fishing to the extent that it is no longer attractive or profitable to a would-be perpetrator. Such actions would usually include increasing the detection likelihood; levying high levels of fines when apprehended and increasing cost of avoidance behaviour to serve as a deterrent. Other actions are aimed at removing various motivating/incentivising conditions or factors that are conducive for engaging in IUU fishing including but not confined to curbing corruption, eradicating bad subsidies, infrastructural development (such as e.g. fishing ports/post-harvest facilities), development of robust collaborative MCS systems and raising awareness about the menace.
a. Counter measures recommended by FAO (cf. FAO 2020, 109) x x
x
x
Elimination of subsidies that contribute to IUU fishing Implementation of international instruments, tools and initiatives that encourage and facilitate the combating of IUU fishing such as FAO’s 2009 Agreement on Port State Measures (PSMA) as buttressed by IPOAIUU and the protocols of High Seas Task Force (2006); ILO and IMO initiatives. Development of a global information exchange system for a swift and efficient exchange of information among Parties on foreign vessels seeking entry into, and using, their designated ports. Information such as whether vessels have ever been denied entry into, or the use of, other ports, their track record of compliance, and outcomes of any inspections conducted, should be shared almost in real time to allow swift detection of IUU fishing activities. Catering for the requirements of developing States (especially capacity development support) in order to ensure widespread implementation of the PSMA.
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x x
x
x
Monitoring and evaluation of the implementation of the PSMA, especially at this early stage of implementation to assess the effectiveness of the PSMA Implementation of the PSMA by regional fishery bodies for them to play an important role in the implementation of the PSMA and adopt conservation management measures (CMMs) concerning port state measures fully aligned with the PSMA. Study transshipment as a potential entry point for catches originating from IUU fishing activities into the market with the aim of closing such loophole by strengthening fisheries governance and improving on the capacity to monitor and control fishing operations. Estimation of IUU fishing for an evidence-based understanding of the effectiveness of measures applied to combating the destructive activity
x
The implementation of the recently endorsed Voluntary Guidelines on the Marking of Fishing Gear to facilitate the monitoring of fishing gear, tracking who is using it and for what purpose, thus contributing to the fight against IUU fishing.
x
Ascertain product legality and origin to ensure that supplies come from operations free of economic, environmental and social issues along the whole fish value chain. This would address food safety and fraud issues whereas; catch documentation schemes (CDSs) are useful tool for preventing the entry into the value chain of fish originating from catches inconsistent with applicable measures, with which seafood legality is ensured at the entry point
x
Recognise the nexus between natural resource sustainability, tenure, access and user rights in the determination of who can use these resources, for how long and under what conditions. How the institutions can be useful in curbing IUU via collaborative MCS?
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b. Additional counter measures Institutional corruption wherein, permission is obtained by illegal operators in connivance with state authorities to engage in illegal fishing practices must be tackled within the national anti-corruption framework. Increasing perceived legislative legitimacy by individuals and the community has been suggested to be crucial for the desired compliance behaviour (cf. Stop Illegal Fishing 2008). The issue of flag of convenience (FoC) whereby a ship's owners register a vessel in a ship register of a country other than that of the ship's owners, and the ship flies the civil ensign of that country; is prone to corrupt practices. Allows IUU fishing vessels to flaghop, i.e. re-flag and change names several times, even within a season, to confuse management and surveillance authorities The use of FoC should be reconsidered whilst, a strong resource governance regime complete with a robust MCS system is instituted underpinned by a good legal system.
Under international law, vessels may fish in the high seas region of the area of competence of international fisheries organizations by virtue of the principle of freedom of fishing. Freedom of fishing undermines responsible fisheries management because it results in overcapitalization of fleets and overexploitation of the fisheries resources. The idea of a “closed-shop” should be considered whereby access to the fisheries resources is available only to countries who agree to exercise effective control over their fishing vessels and agree to comply with the conservation and management measures. Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction (ABNJ) is one such area under competence of international institutions (Commission on the limits of continental shelf/International seabed authority) for which UNCLOS did not provide specific mechanisms or processes for conserving marine biodiversity. This is essentially common property for which some form of property rights and allocation on the high seas should be considered as about 2/3 of the world’s oceans is ABNJ.
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Strengthening regional and international cooperation and coordination in relation of curbing IUU fishing is crucial as the fugitive operators move from place to place in avoiding detection. Cooperation between FAO (Resource), ILO (Labour), IMO (Vessels/Gears) The World Trade Organisation (WTO) should implement mechanism for the eradication of bad subsidies and elimination of dumping in international fish trade. Awareness should be raised about the harm of societal preference/demand for protected species or components of stocks (such as juveniles) which serves as a motivation for fishing operators to engage in IUU fishing. The use of the power of markets (via certification and ecolabelling) for the improvement of fisheries based on the three tier principles of sustainability, minimising environmental impact and enhancing effective management as implemented by the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), has proven to be a subtle but effective way of enforcing standards and changing behaviours towards resource sustainability.
4.0. Conclusion IUU fishing is an important threats to the sustainability of fisheries resource. We have outlined the socio-economic impacts emanating from IUU fishing, accompanied by counter alleviation measures for the consideration of both young emerging practitioners and policy makers in fisheries and fisheries management. Although we have limited our appraisal in this presentation to the socio-economic considerations of IUU fishing and the counter measures to alleviate or eliminate impacts, it will be more helpful to include the environmental considerations in tandem with the socioeconomic aspects because of the interconnectedness. The triangulation of the three considerations would provide a more wholesome perspective of the menace. It is very important to note from the outset that IUU fishing does not occur only at the fish capture segment of the fish value chain. But rather, as we have demonstrated, it is pervasive across the entire value chain which warrants a value chain analytical approach to the assessment of the impacts.
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Thanks for the Invitation (WMU, KMI; MOF)
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Day 2 | Presentation3
WMU & KMI WORKSHOP DAY 2: MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACHES.
ILLEGAL, UNREPORTED AND UNREGULATED FISHING, A THREAT TO HUMAN AND NATIONAL SECURITY
Dr Ifesinachi Okafor-Yarwood Lecturer in Sustainable Development, University of St Andrews, Scotland 16th
February 2022.
@diplomaticife 1
If we lose command of the sea, it is not invasion we must fear but starvation –Adapted from “It’s not invasion we have to fear if our Navy is beaten. It’s Starvation!” attributed to Admiral John Fisher in 1904.
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• Importance of fish • Threat to sustainable fisheries • What about legal fishing? • Unfair fisheries arrangements • Extent and cost of IUU fishing
OUTLINE
• Why does IUU fishing occur • Who dictates what is legal and illegal? • IUU fishing as a threat to human and national security • Linking IUU fishing with Piracy • Regional and global response • Survival of the richest • Solution
3
FISH AS A TRADITION!
• Fisheries as a chain empowerment scheme and a source of: • Food and income • Source of food security for over 200 million Africans. • Fish contributes up to 80% of animal protein consumed in coastal states. • Employment for over 9 million people in West Africa • Men dominate direct fishing while women work in the value chain • 80% of seafood is marketed by women in West Africa
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FISHING AND HUMAN SECURITY – FREEDOM FROM WANT, LINKING IT WITH SOME SDGS
(See for example Okafor-Yarwood, 2019; Obura, 2020; SOFIA, 2020). 5
Marine pollution – 40% of the mangrove vegetation has died since 1958.
Climate change – unless fisheries governance is improved, by 2050 fish in West Africa could be significantly reduced – up to 53% in Nigeria, 56 percent in Cote d’Ivoire, and 60 percent in Ghana – (See: Lovei, 2017)
THREATS TO THE SUSTAINACE OF THE BENEFITS OF FISHERIES
Legal fishing – (See for example: Okafor-Yarwood & Belhabib, 2020).
IUU fishing – amounts to 40 to 65% of the legally reported catch – (See: Agnew et al., 2009; Doumbouya et al., 2017)
Development of the BE sector – (Okafor-Yarwood et al., 2020)
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LEGAL FISHING AS A THREAT TO SUSTAINABILITY
• Green = moderately exploited; grey = data not available; yellow = MSY (fully exploited); Red = depleted/overexploited – (See: Okafor-Yarwood & Belhabib, 2020).
7
EU SFPA AND OVEREXPLOITATION – (Okafor-Yarwood and Belhabib, 2020).
• Over 20% of the species caught in Sao-Tome and Principe are over-exploited • 41% in Mauritania • 7% in Guinea-Bissau • 55% in The Gambia • 28% in Cape Verde
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UNFAIR FISHERIES AND LICENSING AGREEMENT: EG FROM GUINEA-BISSAU
• According to Belhabib et al., (2015), the value of the access agreement between the EU and Guinea-Bissau in 2000 and 2010 was $5.7 million. This access agreement enabled EU vessels to catch fisheries species to the value of $27.6 million. • The value of access agreement with China for the same period $2.9 million. The agreement enabled Chinese vessels to exploit fisheries up to the value of approx. $34 million. • But, things can change!. The last SFPA agreement with GB expired in 2017, renegotiation was delayed ‘due to disproportionate economic and technical conditions proposed by Guinea-Bissau's authorities’. After negotiations a much better deal was offered – in return for providing five years access to 50 EU fishing vessels, ‘the EU will pay GB a financial contribution of €15.6 Mil per year, an increase from the 9.2 Mio € foreseen under the previous protocol… EU shipowners would contribute around 4 Mio € per year’ – (Okafor-Yarwood & Belhabib, 2020).
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IUU fishing •
LETTING THE NUMBERS SPEAK: THE ECONOMIC COST OF IUU FISHING IN AFRICA
Piracy
Africa had lost $200 billion in five decades – 50 • years to illegal fishing (AU, 2013). • Six WA countries lose $2.3 billion per annum to IUU fishing – Mauritania, Senegal, The Gambia, Guinea Bissau, • Guinea, and Sierra Leone (Doumbouya et al., 2017). • Opportunity cost and for regenerating species in Africa $326 billion – 1980 to 2016 (AU-IBAR, 2016). • CA $24.9bil. • EA: 19.3bil. • NA: 81.2bil. • SA: 62.8bil. • WA: 137.9bil. • In West Africa incomes have dropped by as much as 40% per canoe over the last decade (World Bank, 2016).
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$0.9 and $3.3 billion – Gulf of Aden (Besley et al., 2012). • $500 million paid in ransom – 2008 to 2012 (Freeman, 2020) $818.1m – Gulf of Guinea nearly a quarter of this amount spent contracting maritime security. • Recent report says its closer to $2 billion dollars – $28 bil. 2008 to 2021 • $4 million in ransom each year (Jacobsen et al, 2021) • $56 million – 2008 to 2021.
WHY DOES IUU FISHING OCCUR?
• Loophole in the law. • Lack of or limited enforcement capability. • Lack of state interest in the sector. • Flags of convenience – foreign fishing vessels target countries with minimal regulation, cheap registration fees… • Corruption. • Greed • Power and Politics – who decides what is legal or illegal?
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THE POLITICS AND COMPLEXITIES OF IUU FISHING – SIERRA LEONE VS ITALY AND THE EU
• In 2019: CFFA and other NGOs sent a complaint to the EU, they argued that Italian fisheries authorities had failed to comply with their obligations, under the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP), to sanction the illegal activities of Italian trawlers in IEZ of Sierra Leone – (See: Panossian, 2019). • In 2021, following several exchanges with DG MARE, its legal services responded by noting, “no illegal activities of the operators can be proven in this instance”. Their reason: “the lack of exact nautical maps for the delimitation of Sierra Leone IEZ creates difficulties in identifying the actual illegal activities from those being carried out outside the IEZ” – (See: CFFA, 2021).
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IUU FISHING AS A THREAT TO HUMAN AND NATIONAL SECURITY
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IUU FISHING AS A THREAT TO HUMAN SECURITY AND NATIONAL SECURITY – DIRECT IMPACT
• Undermines freedom from want and freedom fear components of human security. • Linked to slavery at sea, human trafficking, illegal oil bunkering and drugs and arms smuggling. • The extreme responses to depletion and associated vulnerabilities further undermine human and national security.
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• They leave the fishing trade and migrate (legally or illegally) – loss of traditional practices. • Depleting fish stock linked to illegal migration from Senegal to Europe – (Shryock, 2020). • Illegal fishing • Borrow money and diversify – a secondary source of income to support earning from fisheries.
HOW DO FISHERFOLK RESPOND?
• Men are forced to be out at sea longer or if the fish catch is small • Women must take out loans or borrow money to cover expenses and are often held accountable if debts are not repaid EXTREME RESPONSES: • Sexual favours in exchange for a steady supply of fish • Drug trafficking • Armed robbery at sea and or acting as informants • Illegal oil bunkering
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COMPLEXITIES OF THE CYCLICAL RESPONSE TO DEPLETING FISHERIES
16
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CRIMINALS OR ACCIDENTAL VIGILANTES? LINKING IUU FISHING TO PIRACY AND ARMED ROBBERY AT SEA – GULF OF GUINEA 24 June 2020 F/V Panofi Frontier • Prior to being attacked, it engaged in a pattern of activity that moves laterally between different regional states – (See: Ralby, 2021). 7 Feb. 21? • Incident off the coast of Gabon – Lian Peng Yu 809? • Potentially used as ‘primary vessel’ for subsequent attacks on Seaking & Marine Spirit 8th and Marie E, 9th off STP. 18 May 2020 • FV Hai Lu Feng II 24 June 2020 • FV Hai Lu Feng II fined (est. $7,300) for switching off AIS in Nigeria waters 17
REGIONAL AND GLOBAL RESPONSE TO IUU FISHING AND VERSUS OTHER MARITIME CRIMES
18
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CURRENT EFFORTS TO ADDRESS THE IUU FISHING = SURVIVAL OF THE RICHEST NOT THE FITTEST! – (OkaforͲYarwood et al 2022).
19
SURVIVAL OF THE RICHEST?
20
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UNFAIR POLICY RESPONSE AND POTENTIAL FOR CONFLICT: VOICES FROM THE FIELD.
• ‘We go to Equatorial Guinea to fish because we are not catching enough in our waters. Their ‘Gendarmerie’ arrest us, assault us, shoot at us and sometimes cease our equipment. Yet, we see trawlers all the time fishing in places reserved for us. Why is our navy not stopping them?’ – Francophone country (2019). • ‘We (fishers) are no longer able to train our kids. So, you have school-going girls at home or hawking goods to help their families. The young boys ride ‘tricycle’… boys and older men take advantage of the girls hawking on the streets, giving them small money to woe them. This is why we have a higher rate of teenage pregnancy in these communities because of such cycles’ – Anglophone country (2021)
21
IUU Fishing • •
•
ARE THE GLOBAL COMMUNITIES FOCUSING ON THE WRONG THREAT?
•
Piracy
GULF OF ADEN 26 PSMA out of 38 • United Nations (UN) Security Council In Sierra Leone, Guinea, adopted various resolutions and statements. Namibia and Guinea-Bissau The following resolutions 1814 (2008), DWF fleets benefit from 1816 (2008), 1838 (2008), 1844 (2008), 27%, 35%, 41% and 42% of 1846 (2008), 1851 (2008), 1897 (2009), the total value of catch in 1918 (2010), 1950 (2010), 1976 (2011), the form of fisheries 2015 (2011), 2020 (2011), 2077 (2012) 2125 subsidies (Oceana, 2021). (2013), 2184 (2014), 2246 (2015), and 2316 WTO deliberating on (2016) and 2383 (2017). ending harmful subsidies for • There is also the Statement of UN the last 2021 years. President (S/PRST/2010/16) of 25 August EU MEPs voted against 2010 and (S/PRST/2012/24) of 19 denying subsidies to vessels November 2012 on piracy. implicated for IUU fishing. • In 2018 The UN Security Council adopted Resolution 2442 (2018) under Chapter VII of its Charter, deploring all acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea off the Somali coast (UN, 2018). GULF OF GUINEA • Resolution 2018 in 2011 and Resolution 2039 in 2012 • UN Security Council presidential statements on piracy and armed robbery at sea in the Gulf of Guinea – most recent August 2021
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REGIONAL EFFORTS TO COMBAT PIRACY IN THE GULF OF GUINEA. • Yaoundé Agreement 2013. • Zones A and G (Lunda and Praia) are not operationalised.
23
TOWARDS A SUSTAINABLE SOLUTION!
24
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FROM LAW ENFORCEMENT TO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: TOWARDS A HOLISTIC RESPONSE TO PIRACY AND ARMED ROBBERY AT SEA
Maritime law enforcement
Environmental conservation
Coastal wellbeing
(See: Okafor-Yarwood et al., 2020; Okafor-Yarwood et al. 2022).
25
26
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Day 2 | Presentation4
Tackling IUU fishing and violations of decent work via International Agreements on Fisheries Professor Dr. Laura Carballo Piñeiro
University of Vigo
Malmö, 16 February 2022
Summary
• •
•
•
1. What is sustainability? 2. International treaties, sustainable fisheries and decent work 3. Environmental and social clauses in multilateral and bilateral investment treaties 4. Social clauses in EU sustainable fisheries partnership agreements
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What is sustainability?
What is sustainability?
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Sustainable Fishing and Decent Work •
•
•
Practically not addressed at international labour until the Work in Fishing Convention, 2007 (C188) and Recommendation No. 199 Domestic standards are very low in many coastal States Link between IUU Fishing and Forced Labour • •
Urgent need of C188 ratification to tackle these issues Interesting initiative: New Zealand and the obligation of being flagged in the country to operate in their EEZ
UNCLOS, art. 62 •
2. The coastal State shall determine its capacity to harvest the living resources of the exclusive economic zone. Where the coastal State does not have the capacity to harvest the entire allowable catch, it shall, through agreements or other arrangements and pursuant to the terms, conditions, laws and regulations referred to in paragraph 4, give other States access to the surplus of the allowable catch, having particular regard to the provisions of articles 69 and 70, especially in relation to the developing States mentioned therein.
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ILO Recommendation No. 199, Part V •
55. A Member, in its capacity as coastal State, when granting licences for fishing in its exclusive economic zone, may require that fishing vessels comply with the requirements of the Convention. If such licences are issued by coastal States, these States should take into account certificates or other valid documents stating that the vessel concerned has been inspected by the competent authority or on its behalf and has been found to be in compliance with the provisions of the Convention.
Multilateral fisheries agreements • •
Art. 94 of UNCLOS The United Nations Agreement for the Implementation of the Provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 10 December 1982 relating to the Conservation and Management of Straddling Fish Stocks and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks (in force as from 11 December 2001) • • •
Art. 4(2)(c): number of crew members Art. 21(8): crew welfare monitored by port State Art. 21(10): inspectors apply regulations dealing with safety of vessels and crew
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Multilateral fisheries agreements •
•
Agreement to promote compliance with international conservation and management measures by fishing vessels on the high seas, Rome 1995 1995 Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries: •
•
6.17 States should ensure that fishing facilities and equipment as well as all fisheries activities allow for safe, healthy and fair working and living conditions and meet internationally agreed standards adopted by relevant international organizations. 8.1.5 States should ensure that health and safety standards are adopted for everyone employed in fishing operations. Such standards should be not less than the minimum requirements of relevant international agreements on conditions of work and service.
Multilateral fisheries agreements •
1995 Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries: •
•
8.2.8 Flag States should promote access to insurance coverage by owners and charterers of fishing vessels. Owners or charterers of fishing vessels should carry sufficient insurance cover to protect the crew of such vessels and their interests, to indemnify third parties against loss or damage and to protect their own interests. 8.2.9 Flag States should ensure that crew members are entitled to repatriation, taking account of the principles laid down in the "Repatriation of Seafarers Convention (Revised), 1987, (No.166)".
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Multilateral fisheries agreements •
Agreement on Port State Measures to Prevent, Deter and Eliminate Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing, 2009 •
Art. 2: The objective of this Agreement is to prevent, deter and eliminate IUU fishing through the implementation of effective port State measures, and thereby to ensure the long-term conservation and sustainable use of living marine resources and marine ecosystems.
Social clauses and free trade agreements
WTO NO
By 2015, 76 FTAs involving 135 countries
NAFTA 1995 First case
Noncompliance
Resistance from developing countries:
Investments versus working conditions World Employment and Social Outlook
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• Sanctions • ADR mechanisms
State members
• Compliance and enforcement
Fair competition
• Level the playing field
EU sustainable fisheries partnership agreements
19 Sustainable Fisheries Partnership Agreements First stage (until around 2001)
Second stage
FPAs focused on employment of nationals: - Not all (Comoros, Gabon, Greenland, Mauritius, Santo Tome e Principle) - Those that yes, did not discuss working and living conditions nor social protection mechanisms (only ambiguous provisions) - If non-compliance, payment of compensation, usually for capacitybuilding activities
All but Cook Islands and Greenland require employment of nationals and lay down working and living conditions: - Reference to the 1998 Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work - Recruitment process - Fisher’s Work Agreements - Social security rights, including insurance for the event of death or long-term disease or injury - Repatriation - Remuneration - Non-compliance: compensation and even loss/suspension of license
Sea Fishing Sectoral Social Dialogue Committee of 19 December 2001
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Social clause in FPAs with third countries Social clause proposed by social actors (ETF, Europeche and Cogeca) to EU in 2014: •
1. The 1998 Declaration of the ILO on fundamental principles and rights at work as well as the eight ILO Fundamental Conventions are fully applicable to the fishermen on board EU vessels. This includes the freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining, the abolition of child labour and the elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and occupation.
Social clause in FPAs with third countries •
•
2. Conditions of employment, including remuneration levels, shall be negotiated between the fishing vessel’s owners or their representatives, the local employer(s) or his/their representative(s) and the fishermen and/or their trade unions. Representative trade unions should be informed at their request about the negotiation. 3. In any case, the remuneration levels of local fishermen cannot be lower than those applicable to the crew in the coastal State signatory of the fishing agreement with the EU. Minimum wage in the flag State at least?
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Social clause in FPAs with third countries •
4. As soon as ILO Convention 188 enters into force, living and working conditions on board EU vessels operating through agreements with third countries have to be in line with the provisions of the Convention, as applicable. The fishing vessel’s owner guarantees to the local fishermen on board EU vessels equivalent living and working conditions applied to the EU fishermen. ILO Convention 188 is applied through Directive (EU) 2017/159
Social clause in FPAs with third countries •
•
5. Each fisherman shall receive a copy of the contract of employment, where the remuneration level, hours of rest and conditions of employment are clearly stated or containing a reference to the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) governing these subjects. If the fishing vessel owner is not the employer, the contract of employment shall specify the name of the fishing vessel owner and the flag State. 6. The employer must provide to each fisherman a payslip reporting the full remuneration and, if remuneration is based, in whole or in part, on hours worked, the hours worked in the period of engagement as well as the function The fishing vessel owner shall ensure that the employer fulfils this obligation. Sanctions if lack of compliance with these provisions?
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Social clause in FPAs with third countries •
•
•
7. The periodical evaluations of the FPAs should include an assessment of the application of the principles stated above, in close collaboration with the SSDC-F. 8. The flag state competent authorities should include the application of its laws, regulations or other measures implementing the social clause as part of their regular inspections. 9. At the discretion of the skipper and under his authority, representatives from trade unions of fishermen may be allowed to come on board the vessel when in port, in order to contact the crew of the vessel and seek information on existing working and living conditions on board and assist the crew as appropriate.
Ongoing Evaluation SFPAs
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People. Development. Impact.
Thank you
Thank you for your attention lcp@uvigo.es
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Day 3 | Presentation 1
IUU fishing and the WCPO tuna fishery Reality and Challenges A View from the Wharf
Francisco Blaha www.franciscoblaha.info
Before I start • I been a guest worker in the Pacific for over half my life. • In no way, shape or form I dare to speak “for” the Pacific. • I been honored a few times to speak “with” the Pacific on some aspects, but that’s it • I’m a guest in the region, not a host. • No one needs someone else from afar to speak on their behalf.
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Who am I? •
Ridiculous mixture of Austrian, GuaraniͲArgentinean, RussianͲGerman and a proud New Zealand citizen
•
Involved in l fishing since I'm 17. As a fisherman, deck officer, fisheries observer, fisheries scientist , factory QC, R&D Manager, Fishery Industry Officer at FAO Rome and a Consultant.
•
I have a MSc in Fisheries Biology (1991), a MSc in Food Science (2000).
•
I work with industry in the Pacific since 1991 (since 95 based in New Zealand), and as a advisor for FFA, NZ MFAT, EU, FAO, UNDP, etc.
•
When I’m not doing my work, I write a fisheries blog, I cook for my family, play music and go surfing, outrigger paddling, ocean swimming, spearfishing as much as I can.
Who am I?
But basically I’m an overqualified fisherman
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What Pacific I’m talking about?
How important is tuna fisheries in the Central & Western Pacific?
Source: FFA & SPC data
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How important is the Central and Western Pacific for Tuna fisheries?
How Tuna Fisheries are managed in Central and Western Pacific?
The WCPFC FFA and SPC that are regional organisations that provide support to its member countries. The PNA The national governments
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What these institutions do and how they relate to each other? • WCPFC: overall management by consensus • SPC: Science and data management service provider to WCPFC, FFA, PNA. • FFA: Fisheries policy, management and compliance for its members • PNA: Sub group of FFA members in management and commercialization of PS tuna. • National governments: Bring their own needs
What is our report card for 2019? • Skipjack tuna, is not overfished and overfishing is not occurring • South Pacific albacore tuna is not overfished and overfishing is not occurring. • Yellowfin tuna, according to the 2019 assessment, is not overfished and overfishing is not occurring. • Bigeye tuna, according to the latest assessment in 2020, is not overfished and overfishing is not occurring.
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How that compares with other oceans?
Bycatch? Lots more to work on
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Bycatch? Lots more to work on
Is the Pacific benefiting from their fish?
Value The share taken by FFA fleets (includes flagged and chartered vessels) has increased significantly in recent years, with the value share rising from 31% in 2013 to 49% in 2018 to exceed the 2020 target.
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Is the Pacific benefiting from their fish? License and access fee revenue: The figure at right shows very large growth in the overall value of license and access fee revenue. Under the current trend the 25% increase is likely to be achieved before 2020. However, this growth has been achieved from purse seine vessels operating under the PNA Vessel Day Scheme and this has slowed in recent years.
Is the Pacific benefiting from their fish?
Total direct employment in the fishing industry (FFA Pacific Island members’ public and private sectors) continues to grow, providing around 22,500 jobs in 2017 – an increase of around 7,000 since 2013.
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What about IUU fishing? Is all the same everywhere? NO
Different oceans, different mixes Atlantic of East Africa: Illegal (unlicensed vessels, illegal transhipments, incursions into EEZ, etc) South Atlantic: Unregulated: the area is not under the management of a RFMO, mile 201 “free” fishing Eastern Pacific: Illegal + unreported: under two different RFMOs, difficult control, mile 201 fishing Western and Central Pacific: Unreported: All legal but under and misreporting happens
What about MCS Ͳ Monitoring, Control & Surveillance of IIU fishing?
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Regional unity has produced via FFA a unique set of Monitoring, Control and Surveillance (MCS) tools like: • FFA VMS • WCPFC Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) • Automatic Identification System (AIS) • Electronic Op Room (EͲOps Room) • Regional Surveillance Picture (RSP)
What about MCS? Regional unity has produced via FFA a unique set of Monitoring, Control and Surveillance (MCS) tools like: • FFA VMS • WCPFC Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) • Automatic Identification System (AIS) • Electronic Op Room (EͲOps Room) • Regional Surveillance Picture (RSP)
What about MCS? Regional unity has produced a unique set of Monitoring, Control and Surveillance (MCS) tools like: • Vessels compliance Index; • Replication of this information to all member countries
High risk FFA VMS contact
Low risk FFA VMS contacts
Medium risk FFA VMS contacts
Medium risk WCPFC VMS contact
Medium risk AIS contact
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What about MCS?
The four FFA coordinated regional surveillance operations using all the regionally available assets (plane and patrol vessels) plus the help of the New Zealand, Australia, France and US forces
What about MCS?
The Harmonized Minimum Terms and Conditions for Access by Fishing Vessels, for all vessels intending to fish in the regional waters;
Framework for foreign vessels to operate under the same minimum rules (going since 1983) Uniform and consistent application Ͳ ensures the Pacific island countries are not played off against each other by Distant Water Fishing Nations
Includes minimal labour standards since 1 January 2020
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What about MCS? Solid registers like the FFA Regional Register of Fishing Vessels (RR) list of vessels in good standing, for those that are in compliance with the Harmonized Minimum Terms and Conditions for Access by Fishing Vessels, for all vessels intending to fish in the regional waters; And also sync to the WCPFC
What about MCS? Observers Programme • Over 2000 deployments a year 100% PS and 5% Longline • Scientific Data • Continuous Observation of the fishing characteristic & effort, catch composition and resource yield • Monitor regulatory conditions under which resources are exploited • Surveillance data Ͳ vessel and aircraft sighting
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What about compliance? The Niue Treaty, which is an agreement on cooperation between FFA members about monitoring, control and surveillance of fishing MCS – it includes provisions on exchange of information plus procedures for cooperation in monitoring, prosecuting and penalizing illegal fishing vessels; and
Cooperation in conducting cooperative surveillance and enforcement activities
Cooperation in sharing fisheries data and intelligence (FDI)
Niue Treaty Information System
Regional Information Management Facility
Notifications Information Authority
MANDATORY data for fisheries purposes OPTIONAL – additional FDI Sharing of FDI for broader law enforcement purposes
What about compliance?
The region has been very advanced in terms of • Electronic Reporting • Electronic Monitoring • Database management (via SPC & PNA FIMS)
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Is it working? Mostly yes
The 2016 IUU Quantification Report estimated the value of total product involving IUU activity in Pacific tuna fisheries …. • 306,440 tons…est total volume • USD $616.11m, est total value • A potential economic loss to Members of $152.67m. • This IUU fishing is mostly driven by licensed vessels (over 95% of the total estimated volume and value of IUU activity) and primarily relates to underͲ reporting, misreporting and nonͲreporting • 2020 update is showing a 50% reduction
In the horizon? • Scales to monitor transhipments • Port States Measures Framework • Catch Documentation Scheme • Incentives for compliance: provide cheaper access to the fishery (or simpler) for operators that have a good compliance history, whilst making it more expensive (and more complicated) for those who don’t.
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In the horizon?
• Scales to monitor transhipments • Port States Measures Framework • Catch Documentation Scheme • Incentives for compliance: provide cheaper access to the fishery (or simpler) for operators that have a good compliance history, whilst making it more expensive (and more complicated) for those who don’t.
Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some • • • •
Data Management and visualizations Machine Learning Artificial Intelligence Our MCS Ͳ IT needs a big step forwards
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Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some Further integration of EM and ER into everyday operations • But there are legal issues to sort (electronic evidence) it may no work for some type of infractions • Data processing capabilities and “dry observers” capabilities • Proprietary software and costs • Enforcement capacity • HS based longliners, (not touching port for years)
Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some High Seas Transhipments • Through a binding conservation and management measure (CMM)—CMM 2009–06—the WCPFC prohibits longliners and other vessels from transhipping on the high seas except where CCM has determined that “it is impracticable for certain vessels . . . to operate without being able to tranship on the high seas.” • Just 4 countries —China, Chinese Taipei, Korea and Vanuatu—accounted for 84% and 89% of those transhipments in in the last 4 years, respectively. • Reported high seas transhipment events continue to increase with 552 events reported in 2014 to 1,809 events reported in 2020.
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Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some High Seas Transhipments
Notice how most of these transshipments take place on the borders of EEZs, rather than in the most isolated areas of the high seas, where it really will be impractical.
Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some Sonar FADs Management / Effort Creep / Behaviour • The total number of deployments varied between 30,700 and 56,900 in 2016 (based on average and quantile 95%) and 44,700 and 64,900 in 2017”. • The number of transmissions from buoys almost doubled in 2017 (8.6 million compared to 4.5 in 2016) and the number of individual buoys active in the available data was 10,915 in 2016 and 18,405 in 2017. • One could be inclined to think that with so many FADs there are actually no free schools… but just schools swimming in between FADs.
Smoothed kernel density of deployments of buoys per 1° grid cell during 2017. Maximum number of deployments per cell is 300 in 2017
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Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some Labour standards • This young man earns 350 USD/ month on a 3 year contract no going home • If he was in a Spanish FV he’ll be making 1000, 4 months on Ͳ 2 to 4 down • If he was in a Ecuadorian FV, he’ll be on 500USD+ month with 75 days off a year (paid) • Our FFA MTCs guarantees him a contract but not the amount of his salary. • This is not only labour, it is also about exploitation
Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some Under resourcing of fisheries administrations • This was the entry to the office and boarding equipment of a main fisheries port in the region (2017). • In 2020 the excellent actions of an officer lead to the arrest of a vessel with fines of around 3,000,000 USD, yet he only earns 20,000 USD a year. • The funding for the organizations and for talent retention is woefully low in comparison of the value of the fishery. • Yet the competing needs at country level (i.e. health, infrastructure, education, communications, etc) are to be attended as well.
Dealing with the level of development of the present fisheries requires excellence, yet we pay less than mediocrity to fisheries officers
- 176 -
Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some Geopolitics and subsidies • The Pacific is the playground for diplomatic influence. Fisheries can be a vehicle for other purposes and incredible pressures come come from the DWFN. • DWFN are not playing their part as responsible flag states • For nonͲPICs and DWFNs the issue of sustainability is one of longͲterm financial benefit. However, for PICs it is also an identity and food security issue, one that DWFNs have less trouble with, as they can leave… but PICs can’t. • Tuna is the lifeline of the Pacific but the balance of benefits is entirely skewed, in a way that has not moved far from the times of colonialism. • Colonialism still around here… France, UK, USA, Chile and Indonesia have control of some pacific islands • At 55 I’m older than most the countries I work, yet I have experienced more “humanity” here in places that barely figure on maps, than in countries whose “empires” covered the earth.
Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some of my “favourites” Climate Change Tuna is moving East Pathways to sustaining tuna dependent Pacific Island economies during climate change July 2021 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893Ͳ 021Ͳ00745Ͳz
Here we don't
Here we put the rules and control them
- 177 -
Challenges? Many… Is the biggest fishery in the world after all, here are some Attracting diversity and new ways of thinking • I think I have been one of the youngest consultants in fisheries in the region for over 20 years now … and that reflects very badly on us as a sector… • if you were to try to design the stereotype of a fisherman, you wouldn't fall far from a big bearded man with sun and salt dry skin that is weary of paper pushers. So you’ll come not far from me… • Yet if my gender, age, and background represent the only good way to do things, then how come we are facing the problems we have? • How hypocritical would it be of me to not try to bring in and listen to new voices, new perspectives, new ways to do things. • We need capable people that is keen to help to work things out… not just point fingers
Questions? “I am not young enough to know everything” Oscar Wilde
- 178 -
Day 3 | Presentation 2
Tools in RFMOs to Fight against IUU Fishing
Jung-re Riley Kim Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries of Korea
I will be taking about
9what regional fisheries management organizations are, 9how they are related to the UN and its specialized agencies, 9what they do to conserve and manage fish stocks and related ecosystem
9what tools they have to ensure compliance to fight against IUU fishing
- 179 -
I will be talking about
Introduction to RFMOs
Tools of RFMOs for the Fight against IUU Fishing
What is an RFMO? 9Intergovernmental organization where governments are represented
9shared responsibilities for fish under their management
9No membership, no fish
950 Regional Fisheries Bodies, five of them are tuna RFMOs
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Five Tuna RFMOs
How RFMOs are Related to UN
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What does an RFMO do?
9Adopt conservation and management measures
9Conduct scientific work, including stock assessment
9Monitors compliance with conservation and management measures
- 183 -
Conservation and Management Measures RULE BOOK of RFMOs 9Renewed, revised or introduced at Commission meetings 9Based on Members’ proposals 9Different level of obligations and different names amongst RFMOs
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RFMO Structure Final decisions
Commission Committees •Scientific Committee
Advice to the Commission
•Compliance Committee •Finance and Administration Committee Working Groups
Brief History of IUU Fishing
9 Decades-long problem that ever evolves 9 UNFSA calling on the need to fight IUU fishing 9 CCAMLR coined the term “IUU” fishing
- 185 -
Examples of IUU fishing 9 fishing without authorization, 9 fishing in an area of an RFMO while the flag state is not a Member 9 fishing with a vessel without a flag, 9 fishing in excess or without allocated fishing opportunities, 9 fishing in a closed area or period, 9 cooperating or supporting an IUU fishing vessel, 9 fishing for prohibited species
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Port state measures
9 What are major elements? 9 Are t-RFMOs’ PSM consistent with FAO? 9 Any room for improvements?
Port state measures-major elements Port entry or use
9 Advance notice of port entry required 9 Denial of use of ports when a vessel is in a port 9 Any denial of port entry 9 Explicit communications regarding denial of entry or use
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Port state measures-major elements Inspection
9 Minimum inspection levels 9 Priorities for inspectors 9 Minimum standards for inspector training or functions 9 Minimum standards for inspection reports 9 Reporting on all port inspections
Port state measures-major elements Other elements
9 Force majeure provisions 9 Applicability to all CPC ports no matter where located 9 Requirements apply to any foreign-flagged vessels seeking access to port
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Information source: ISSF Technical Report 2021-09 Holly Koehler, page 11
IUU Vessel Listing QRPLQDWLRQ
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Important Considerations FGNGVKQP 9 :KHQ FRQVLGHUHG WKH IODJ VWDWH KDV WDNHQ VXIILFLHQW DFWLRQV DJDLQVW WKH YHVVHO 9 7KH YHVVHO KDV EHHQ VROG DQG D QHZ RZQHU KDV QR UHODWLRQVKLS ZLWK LW 9 7KH YHVVHO KDV EHHQ VFUDSSHG DQG QR ORQJHU H[LVWV
NKUVKPI 9 :KHQ FRQVLGHUHG WKH IODJ VWDWH DFWLRQV DUH LQVXIILFLHQW 9 1R IODJ VWDWH WR DVVXPH UHVSRQVLELOLW\ IRU WKH YHVVHO
What Constitutes IUU Fishing
Information source: ISSF Technical Report 2021-02 Claire van der Geest,
- 194 -
Issues for further considerations
9 The use of diverse information sources including a third party 9 Improvements in decision making 9 transparency 9 Consistency among RFMOs 9 And what else?
IUU-listed vessels are not allowed to.. 9 UHFHLYH VXSSRUWV IURP RWKHU YHVVHOV LQFOXGLQJ IXHOV DQG RWKHU JRRGV 9 WUDQVVKLS ZLWK RWKHU YHVVHOV DW VHD DQG LQ SRUW RU HQJDJH LQ MRLQW RSHUDWLRQ 9 XVH VHUYLFH RI D SRUW RI D 0HPEHU 9 UHIODJ WR RWKHU 0HPEHUV 9 WUDGH H[SRUW RU ODQG FDWFKHV 9 EH YDOLGDWHG ZLWK FDWFK GRFXPHQWV 9 $QG WKH\ DUH VXEMHFW WR RWKHU PHDVXUHV RWKHU 0HPEHUV WDNH
- 195 -
Consideration in De-listing a Vessel
Information source: ISSF Technical Report 2021-02 Claire van der Geest,
Cross listing of IUU lists among t-RFMOs 9 CCSBT, IATTC and IOTC have IUU vessel cross-listing procedures
9 Why Cross-listing?
9 What are the obstacles?
- 196 -
Emerging, multifaceted issues
9 Safety of those on board fishing vessels 9 Labor standards for crew on fishing vessels 9 marine pollution 9 Climate change 9 And what else?
Information Source for my presentation
9 ,QWHUQDWLRQDO 6HDIRRG 6XVWDLQDELOLW\ )RXQGDWLRQ UHSRUWV RQ ,88 OLVWLQJ RI 5)02V DQG SRUW VWDWH PHDVXUHV ,66) 7HFKQLFDO 5HSRUW &ODLUH YDQ GHU *HHVW DQG ,66) 7HFKQLFDO 5HSRUW +ROO\ .RHKOHU 9 :HEVLWHV RI WKH ILYH WXQD 5)02V ZZZ ZFSIF LQW ZZZ ,DWWF RUJ ZZZ ,FFDW LQW ZZZ ,RWF RUJ ZZZ &FVEW RUJ
- 197 -
Questions?
- 198 -
Day 3 | Presentation 3
WMU-MOF-KMII CAPFISH H Project Transparency y and d Technology y to o Tackle e IUU U Fishing
Courtney Farthing (GFW) and Duncan Copeland (TMT) February 2022
Ourr ocean n iss vitall e on n earth forr life
It creates oxygen, regulates weather, cycles fres h water and abs orbs carbon. It is home to up to 80% of the planet's biodivers ity and provides es s ential nutrition and livelihoods for billions of people.
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Ourr ocean n iss underr e pressure immense
A third of the world’s major commercial fis h s pecies are overfis hed and the United Nations es timates that two thirds of the marine environment has been s ignificantly altered by human actions .
Ourr ocean n iss poorly y monitored
There is no global picture of all human activity at s ea and we cannot truly unders tand humanity’s impact on life below water. This lack of vis ibility allows illegal, unreported and unregulated fis hing to thrive.
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A digitall revolution n e ocean forr the
Recent advances in big data and technology are rapidly trans forming our ability to generate new ins ights and make them public and vis ible. At Global Fis hing Watch we believe it’s vital to s eize this opportunity.
Ourr purpose
Create and publicly share knowledge about human activity at s ea to enable fair and s us tainable us e of our ocean.
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Pioneering g technologyy highlightss human n activityy att sea
Historic c data
Nearr real-time e data
Easyy to o use
Accessible A ibl and d free e
Several years of data across all datasets: Fishing effort, encounters between vessels, night-light vessel detections, vessel events and identity.
Data published with a 72-hour delay and access to historical vessel tracks and fishing activity back to January 1, 2012.
Designed to support users to see and assess fishing activity, and track individual vessels over time.
Freely available to anyone with an internet connection; easy to access and use, developed to run on mid-level computers and with a low data consumption.
New w tools s forr research h and d analysis Globall Fishing g Watch h d Map updated The Global Fishing Watch map is the first openaccess online tool for visualization and analysis of vessel-based human activity at sea. The updated map merges multiple types of
vessel tracking data to support analysis of global human activity at sea, including fishing activity, encounters between vessels, night light vessel detection and vessel presence.
The next generation of map supporting advanced visualization, research and analysis
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globalfishingwatch.org/map
Transparencyy ass a new w tooll to o drive e governance
Creating g self -service e tools s and d sharing g open n data a
Fishing g effort Daily fishing effort searchable and downloadable by fishing gear type and flag State, down to a resolution of ~1km.
Vessell presence e& matching Vessel activity (port, encounters, loitering, gaps, history) and fishing effort. AIS analysis for ports and anchorages visited. Matching of AIS data to radar and nightlight detections.
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Transshipment T hi
Oceanographic Oceanogra
Shows carrier vessel activity; pinpoints encounters between vessels, collates fishing authorizations and identifies frequently-visited ports.
Data will include sea surface temperature, salinity, currents, bathymetry and seamounts, and data on climate change such as sea surface temperature anomalies.
New w tools s to o help p transform m marine e management Globall Fishing g Watch h e Manager Marine A freely available, innovative technology portal. It provides near real-time, dynamic, and interactive data on ocean conditions, biology, and human-use activity to support marine spatial planning, marine protected area design and management, and scientific research. globalfishingwatch.org/marine-manager Adding environmental data and non-fishing activity to support best -practice spatial management
New w tools s to o help p transform m marine e management Globall Fishing g Watch h Carrierr Vessels Transshipment – moving fishing catch from one vessel to another – is a vital but largely hidden part of the global commercial fishing industry. Our transshipment monitoring portal pinpoints encounters between vessels, collates fishing authorizations, and identifies frequently -visited ports to build a picture of risk. This enables authorities to investigate potential transshipment activities from flagged and foreign vessels that may not be compliant with regulations. globalfishingwatch.org/carrier-portal Timeline of interactions, port visits and key information
User driven, map-based visualization for analysis
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Combining g more e satellite e data a to o reveall more e activity y att sea a
Impactt att scale By creating and publicly sharing map vis ualizations , data and analys is tools , we enable s cientific res earch and drive a trans formation in how we manage our ocean. FAO O Globall Atlass off AIS-based d Fishing g Activity
- 205 -
KMI-FRA-GFW W Collaboration n to o identify y IUU In partnership with the Korea Maritime Institute and the Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, our unprecedented use of satellite technologies detected the vessels, known as the dark fleet as they do not appear in public monitoring systems.
PLACEHOLDER P LACEH HOLDER IMAGE IMAGE
Key findings : Ɣ More than 900 ves s els in 2017, and 700 in 2018, detected fis hing in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea waters , likely violating U.N. s anctions .
Ɣ
The ves s els likely caught as much s quid as J apan and the Republic of Korea combined, worth over US $440 million.
Supporting g fisheries s surveillance e and d control Collaboration and information sharing are key to detecting suspicious vessels and achieving well-managed fisheries. Globall Fishing g Watch h and d the e United d Statess Coastt Guard
Ɣ Ɣ Ɣ
Potentiall unregulated d transshipmentt activity, U fishing g risks,, and d IUU identifying g vessell AIS S trackss thatt appeared d to o have e been n manipulated d to o reportt false e information..
Ourr collaboration n resulted d in n the e USCG G identifying g eightt timess the e numberr off violationss off fisheriess measuress than n theyy had d done e in n previouss operations..
- 206 -
Supporting g fisheries s surveillance e and d control Collaboration and information sharing are key to detecting suspicious vessels and achieving well-managed fisheries. Globall Fishing g Watch h and d the e Aquaticc Resourcess
Authorityy off Panama Ɣ
Ɣ
A review w off alll AIS S data a linked d to o a fishing g vessell with h a Panama a related d Maritime e Mobile e Service e Identityy wass carried d outt and d then n compared d with h the e Panamanian n officiall internationall fleett registry Anyy outlierss were e presented d to o ARAP P forr furtherr investigation
Ourr collaboration n resulted d in n ARAP P identifying g 22 2 casess off fraudulentt use e off Panama’ss flag
Analysis s and d training Global Fishing Watch’s globally-distributed team of analysts provide insights and training to help authorities use and benefit from our data and technology.
Ourr open n and d shareable e analysiss iss being g used d to o strengthen n keyy areass s monitoring,, controll and d surveillance e (MCS)) off fisheries IUU fishing risk as s es s ment
Trans s hipment monitoring
Port control implementation
- 207 -
Marine protected area monitoring
MCS operational s upport
Introducing g the e Jointt Analyticall Calll (JAC)
Who o we e are TMT is a non-profit organisation that provides national fisheries authorities and international organisations with fisheries intelligen analysis, and capacity building, targeting a reduction of illegal fish and broader improvements in ocean governance. Operating globally, with a focus on Africa. We work with countries and other partners bilaterally, as well as regional cooperation mechanisms.
- 208 -
Achieved d through -
close operational cooperation and information sharing with governmentagencies, IGOs and other relevant actors
-
fisheries intelligence gathering and analysis, and vessel tracking
-
training and support provided to fisheries enforcement authorities to build their capacity and systems to collect relevant intelligence, plan and execute enforcement actions and prosecute fisheries violations
-
the development of data sources, tools and technology that assists in the capture of information on high risk fisheries operations
Fisheries s Analyticall Capacity y Tooll (FACT) FACT is TMT’s bespoke fisheries intelligence management and analytical syst designed specifically to support, speed up and strengthen the analytical proce FACT has been built with the single express purpose of capturing and analysin the identities and characteristics of the global fishing fleet and the companies t operate it. The system is dedicated to achieving a comprehensive overview of fishing ves identity (current and historic), ownership, authorisation, compliance history and risk profile, photo database, positional and other relevant information.
- 209 -
- 210 -
Jointt Analyticall Cell:: A transformative collaboration Established by TMT, GFW and IMCSN as a collaborative effort des igned to harnes s complementary information gathering and analytical capabilities , fis heries intelligence tools and databas es , and international partners hips . Recognis es that collaborations were happening but in is olation of each other. Seeks to us e available data, tools and technologies more effectively to provide higher quality and more powerful analys is Drives more cos t-efficient mechanis ms to ens ure actionable data is available to thos e who need it mos t to improve ocean s tewards hip.
Technology y and d analysis s forr smarterr cooperation The JAC will develop into a larger coalition of like-minded organizations and agencies, and a ‘home’ for technology, data and operational support, that will be a representative model for how organizations and State and non-State actors can collaboratively work together to achieve the shared goals of: - detecting,deterring,andeliminatingIUU fishingactivities - building the capacity of developing countries to more effectivelyand efficientlyimplementand maintaintheir own MCSregimes - leveragingdata and technologyto inform and support global fisheriespolicyandstrengthengovernanceprocesses - increasingoveralltransparencyof fishingactivitiesat sea
- 211 -
JAC TMT GFW IMCSN
TECHNICAL PARTNERS SKYLIGHT C4ADS KSAT SEAVISION CANADA DFO
COUNTRY PARTNERS
OPERATIONAL PARTNERS CANADA DFO US COAST GUARD UNODC
FUNDING PARTNERS VIBRANT OCEAN OCEANS5 OCEANKIND OTHERS IN DEVELOPMENT
A collaborative e celll design n to o evolve.....
....build d on n currentt relationships s and d extend d to o new w ones s
- 212 -
Focus s Areas 1. Port Controls & Ves s el Ris k As s es s ment 2. Fis heries patrol planning and s upport 3. T rans hipment Monitoring 4. MCS Capacity Building 5. Global Is s ues of Interes t
Vessell Viewerr Enhancing fishing vessel monitoring and supporting States in implementing effective port controls
- 213 -
Vision Ɣ Port authorities can effectively use their limited res ources to quickly identify key operational features and ris k of a ves s el to make an informed decis ion.
Ɣ More acces s ible information about a ves s el’s identity and activity is available to quickly as s es s s us picious elements
Status Ɣ Initially available to 4 pilot countries: Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Kenya and Senegal, as well as the FMCs of two regional bodies in Eas t and Wes t Africa Ɣ Available in Englis h and French Ɣ Free to us e - only an account needed Ɣ Works acros s multiple devices : mobile, tablets and des ktop computers
- 214 -
Key y functionalities
Vessell identity y and d activity Present and historical
Recentt and d historic c AIS 72 hour delay
Save e forr e access offline Helps with spotty internet
Customize e activityy highlighting By activity type, duration, etc.
Map View
Visualize a voyage
Generall structure e off the e app Change language
- 215 -
Logout
Vessell search
Data Sources: Ɣ AIS S (GFW) Ɣ Otherr (TMT)
Fill in at leas t 2 criteria for better res ults . Bes t res ults us ing: Ɣ Ves s el Name Ɣ IMO number Ɣ MMSI (for activity)
Vessell detaill
INFO tab includes: Ɣ Information from both GFW and TMT Ɣ Ves s el his tory Ɣ In-app help text
INFO O tab
Three s ections 1. Identity 2. Save for offline acces s 3. Highlight events
- 216 -
Ɣ
Offline e access
Ɣ
Stores data on your device. Great for areas with unreliable internet connections
Vessell detaill ACTIVITY tab: Ɣ Bas ed on AIS Ɣ Groups info by voyage Ɣ Can be filtered by event times and time period
ACTIVITY Y tab
Expand to s ee the different events : Ɣ Encounter Ɣ Port vis its Ɣ Loitering Ɣ Fis hing
- 217 -
Vessell detaill
MAP P tab visualizes the data geographically, to see vessel tracks and events
MAP P tab
Exploring the map Ɣ Information n icon opens details of event Ɣ Funnell icon filters events by type and time period Ɣ Layerss icon s ets context layers e.g. EEZ, MPS, RFMOs .
Highlights events
Highlights s allow you to configure settings Set the data that is relevant for you, such as: Ɣ Events in a s pecific EEZ Ɣ Encounters in an RFMO Ɣ Duration of event Ɣ And others ...
- 218 -
Targett future e functionalities s
Flag g iff operation n has s risk k history
Reduce e 72 2 hourr y to o nearr realdelay time e
n off userr Adaptation interfacess forr differentt needs
Thank k you
www.globalfishingwatch.org www.tm -tracking.org
- 219 -
Requestt in-depth h analysiss from m JAC
Extension to otherr use e cases s and d globall users
Day 3 | Presentation 4
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COVID-19 holding back exports/imports but Korea’s distant water fisheries production to maintain previous levels Distant water fisheries development strategy to be developed based on integrated database of Electronic monitoring system i.e., electronic logbook, observer data, FMC monitoring results Korea’s recently developed distant water fishery e-logbook app offers convenience
Need to develop into fishing operation system driven by 4th industrial revolution: Pilot project on autonomous fishing vessel (2025-) Prioritize vaccination of international voyagers, depending on COVID situation Expand remote health care system for those who engage in distant water fisheries Source: “A Study on How to Improve Fishing Vessel Workers’ Safety and Rights in accordance with International Law” by Peter Han, et al., 2020; ,.* QSFTFOUBUJPO BU %JTUBOU 8BUFS 'JTIFSJFT 0VUMPPL BOE *TTVFT 4FTTJPO .BSJUJNF 7JTJPO 4FNJOBS CZ +FPOH .ZVOH IXB FU BM
Seafarer human rights, fishing vessel safety to be critical Urgent need to respond to and prepare for ratification of international regulations that bolster seafarer rights and fishing vessel safety, i.e., IUU regulations, ILO C188, IMO CTA, etc. ń Measures underway, i.e., preparation for ratification, safe fishing vessel development
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Korea has taken on challenges and measures against IUU fishing but needs to do more. Response to FAO, ILO, IMO conventions/guidelines particularly important. Building the legal framework and implementing laws in organic collaboration with relevant organizations critical in fighting IUU fishing – Building capability to bolster execution is important MOF, National Fishery Products Quality Management Service, Regional O&F Administrations are responsible for port state control, but fishers themselves need to comply with standards and make efforts to abide by regulations for sustainable oceans and fisheries industry. Distant water fisheries: Distant Water Fisheries Development Act amended, measures and actions taken including FMC to meet international standard Korea’s IUU monitoring to be reinforced in littoral sea Must closely work with international community to combat IUU fishing in main waters of operation, i.e., South Pacific, Atlantic, Indian Ocean, Antarctic Ocean as well as waters surrounding Korea Need to share Korea’s experience and efforts in fighting IUU through international cooperation and ODA projects
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Expert Presentation 1 :Overview of Fishing/Fisher Safety in Relation to IUU Fishing Mr. Ari Gudmundsson Expert Presentation 2 :IUU Fishing and Crime in the Caribbean Cmdr. Judy-Ann Neil,Jamaica Defence Force
Expert Presentation 3 :Fighting IUU Fishing at Sea in the South Atlantic: The Argentinian Coast Guard Achievements, Applied Technology and Maritime Intelligence LCDR. Fernando Roberto Rodriguez, Argentinian Coast Guard Expert Presentation 4 :Canada’s Fisheries Monitoring, Control and Surveillance (MCS) and Enforcement, and International IUU Fishery Initiatives Professor Neil Bellefontaine, WMU
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Day 4 | Presentation 1
Ari Gudmundsson Independent Expert, Iceland
WMU-MOF-KMI CAPFISH Project Second Workshop 15-18 February 2022 World Maritime University, Malmö, Sweden © Tomas Marshall
Overview of fishing/fisher safety in relation to IUU fishing Outline 2
Fishing – the most dangerous occupation in the world and safety culture Effects of fisheries management policies and IUU fishing on safety National safety policies to improve safety Available guidance – International instruments Comparison between cargo ships and fishing vessels (from a safety perspective) Lessons learned by Iceland – a country that has implemented international instruments Concluding remarks - 271 -
3
Fishing - the most dangerous occupation in the world Annual fatality rates: Global (ILO study): >80 fatalities/100 000 fishers UK fishing: 62 fatalities/100 000 fishers US fishing: 100 fatalities/100 000 fishers Fishers in the UK 6 times more likely to die than workers in other sectors in the country
Safety culture 4
The fishing industry is characterized by the lack of a safety culture Many factors have led to this, such as: poorly designed and built vessels insufficient education and training poverty outdated legislation lack of awareness fishing practices ‘attitude’
Safety culture needs to be supported by a regulatory framework - 272 -
5
Effects of fisheries management policies on fishing safety FAO has concluded that safety should be integrated into fisheries management Open-access fisheries force crews to work long hours & vessels to operate in bad weather Access limited by vessel size, “rule-beaters“, may affect vessel safety negatively Example: a vessel, built in 2018 that sank in 2019, had a length of 20.99m and height of 10m!!!
Fisheries managers and safety professionals must work together!
© Kenfish and Norwegian Society for Sea Rescue
IUU fishing and safety at sea 6
IUU fishing: term to define unauthorized fishing activities Undermines national and regional efforts to conserve and manage fish stocks One in every 5 fish is coming from IUU fishing Accounts for up to USD 23.5 billion per year Operators, who carry out IUU fishing to maximize profits, are less likely to © Environmental Justice Foundation invest money in safety Reduced IUU fishing will result in improved safety Global safety regime could contribute to the fight against IUU fishing
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7
Development and implementation of national safety policies Long-term objective of improved safety/health Holistic and comprehensive national policies Immediate objectives: reduction in accidents & loss of life in capture fisheries higher levels of professionalism within the sector decent and productive working conditions safe and healthy work practices
Cooperation and coordination at national level and participatory approach are the key Guidance: FAO/ILO/IMO publications
8
Available guidance – International instruments In 1960s, FAO, ILO and IMO entered into an agreement to cooperate, acknowledging following respective areas of competence: FAO – fisheries in general ILO – labour in fishing industry IMO – safety of life, vessels and equipment at sea
This cooperation has resulted in several mandatory and voluntary instruments that are now available for fishing vessels of all sizes as well as for their crews
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9
Fishing Vesselrelated instruments
X
V
Part B of the Code of Safety
X
V
Voluntary Guidelines
V
Safety Recommendations
V
Implementation Guidelines
X
X
X
ILO Work in Fishing Convention (No.188)
X
X
X
ILO Work in Fishing Recommendation (No.199)
X
X
X
FAO Port State Measures Agreement
X
X
X
M V M
Undecked (all)
Decked < 12 m/
750 kW Decked 12-24 m
Instruments Ļ 2012 Cape Town Agreement
M
X X
Fishing Vessel Personnelrelated instruments
M V V V M V
STCW-F Convention X Document for Guidance on Training and Certification of X Fishing Vessel Personnel Part A of the Code of Safety Safety Recommendations ILO Work in Fishing Convention (No.188) ILO Work in Fishing Recommendation (No.199)
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X
X
X X
X X
X X X X
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750 kW
Decked 24 m
Voluntary
Application by vessel length and engine power ĺ
Mandatory
10
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11
The ‘4 pillars’ of international law regarding fishing-related matters 2012 Cape Town Agreement ILO Work in Fishing Convention (No.188) FAO Port State Measures Agreement STCW-F Convention One thing in common: port State control/measures (PSC/PSM) Every foreign-flag vessel is subject to PSC/PSM, when in a port of another party PSC/PSM inspections are also carried out on vessels from non-parties to ensure that no more favourable treatment is given to such vessels
12
Application of the IMO Ship Identification Number Scheme to fishing vessels Useful for safety and combatting IUU fishing Voluntary to fishing vessels down to 12 m LOA, authorized to operate outside the flag State Some RFMOs have made the IMO number mandatory in their convention areas IMO number is: unchanged during the entire life of the vessel inserted in the vessel's certificates permanently marked on the hull structure of merchant ships, not fishing vessels ©Trygg Mat Tracking
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13
Comparison between cargo ships and fishing vessels Proposed at 1960 Conference that SOLAS should also apply to fishing vessels Agreed that the safety of fishing vessels needed to be addressed but in a separate path Main reason: Safety issues on fishing vessels of a different nature from those on merchant ships On merchant ships: Most of hazardous operations are carried out in the safety of the port On fishing vessels: Crews must work on open decks, in all weathers, with the hatches open, locating and gathering their cargo from the sea
14
Comparison between cargo ships and fishing vessels Cargo ships
Fishing vessels
NUMBER OF VESSELS AND PEOPLE Total number of vessels Total number of people engaged on merchant ships Total number of people killed and missing per year
121 thousand 1.2 million 207
4.6 million 39 million 24 000
BINDING INSTRUMENTS ON THE DESIGN, CONSTRUCTION AND EQUIPMENT Construction Stability Machinery Fire safety Protection of the crew and fisheries observers Life-saving appliances Emergency procedures, musters and drills Radiocommunications Safety of navigation IMO Numbers permanently marked
SOLAS / LL (in force) LL (in force) SOLAS (in force) SOLAS (in force) SOLAS (in force) SOLAS (in force) SOLAS (in force) SOLAS (in force) SOLAS (in force) SOLAS (in force)
CTA (not in force) CTA (not in force) CTA (not in force) CTA (not in force) CTA (not in force) CTA (not in force) CTA (not in force) CTA (not in force) CTA (not in force) N/A
OTHER RELEVANT BINDING INSTRUMENTS Collisions Working and living conditions Prevention of pollution from vessels Control and management of ballast water Training, Certification, and Watchkeeping
COLREGs (in force) ILO.188 (in force) MARPOL (in force) BWM (in force) STCW (in force)
COLREGs (in force) MLC (in force) MARPOL (in force) BWM (in force) STCW-F (in force)
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15
Implementation of international instruments on fishing vessel safety – lessons learned by Iceland Fishing - a dangerous occupation due to extreme weather conditions, unsafe vessels, poorly educated and trained crews, insufficient SAR services, etc. Fishing industry - the backbone of the economy High death toll generally accepted by vessel owners, politicians, general public, and crews Safety culture hardly existing
16
Role of women in improving the situation Wives, mothers and daughters to fishers knew too well the consequences of accidents at sea and called for action to improve fishing safety 1968: the ‘Triple Trawler Tragedy’ led to a safety campaign led by women from Hull, England.
BBC documentary on these events: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6AYAuloI-o - 278 -
17
First attempts by IMO to improve fishing safety Lessons learned from accidents useful for IMO Sub-Committee on Safety of Fishing Vessels Development of a new international convention Adoption of the Torremolinos International Convention for the Safety of Fishing Vessels, 1977, the first international instrument on fishing vessel safety International recognition of this work in 1983
18
Benefits of applying international instruments, such as the 2012 Cape Town Agreement Recognized international standard Improvement of safety at sea Level playing field Better second-hand market for fishing vessels Regulatory framework plays a key role International instruments – the best guidance for the development of national legislation - 279 -
19
Impact of a new national legislation CTA and its forerunners - the backbone of legislation Considerable reduction in vessel losses, accidents and fatalities Improved safety culture Several years without any fatal accidents at sea Industry is now attractive to young people, both men and women
Concluding remarks 20
Fishing - the most dangerous occupation in the world Fisheries management may affect fishing safety Reduced IUU fishing will improve safety at sea Available guidance: FAO/ILO/IMO instruments on design, construction, equipment and operation of fishing vessels of all sizes and their crew Link between safety, decent work and IUU fishing It is easy for a flag Administration, already dealing with cargo ships, to also address safety-related matters on large industrial fishing vessels This underscores the necessity to bring the 2012 Cape Town Agreement into force ASAP Example from Iceland demonstrates how international instruments can improve safety at national level - 280 -
21
!˱ ήϜη 陉陉! Thank you! Merci! ¡Gracias! ǿȝȎȟȖȏȜ
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Day 4 | Presentation2
WMU/MOF/KMI CAPFISH H PROJECT T WORKSHOP
IUU FISHING AND CRIMES IN THE CARIBBEAN by
Cdr Judy-Ann Neil 15 – 18 February 2022 Malmo, Sweden
OVERVIEW • Introduction
• IUU Fishing in the Caribbean • Case Study of Jamaica • Nexus between IUU Fishing and Transnational Crimes • Indicators of Transition from Fishing to Trafficking • The Way Forward • Conclusion
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INTRODUCTION
www.caribbean_general_map.png
INTRODUCTION Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) Fishing Fishing in contravention of national, regional and international laws - Misreporting or non-reporting of information on fishing - Fishing by stateless vessels - Fishing by vessels not party to or in contravention of RFMO - Fishing in areas or for fish stock where there is no conservation or management measures -
(FAO, 2011)
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IUU FISHING • One of main threats to fisheries resources in Caribbean • Not just an ecological problem • Threat to economic and food security • Major factor for economic vulnerability of fishers
IUU FISHING IN THE CARIBBEAN Who ? • Primarily by domestic artisanal fishers - ‘Overlook’ need for licence - Nearshore
• Greatest impact from industrial fishers - Size of vessel and crew - Volume of fisheries resources - Lobster, conch, sea cucumbers
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CASE STUDY OF JAMAICA
THE ARCHIPELAGO OF JAMAICA
www.caribbean_general_map.png w ww ww. w ca cariibb b ea ean_ge ean g n gene ne era al_ma m p. p.pn p g
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PEDRO BANK
Source: Data Unit, Natural Resources Conservation Authority
.
IMPACTS OF IUU FISHING IN JAMAICA
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IMPACTS OF IUU FISHING ON JAMAICA • Environmental Impacts - Destructive fishing practices - Destruction of habitats - Overfishing of high value species - Reduction in fish stock • Food Security • Socio-Economic - Loss of Tax Revenues - Tourism - Non-lucrative career
TRENDS IN FISHERIES IN JAMAICA
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23% decline in conch 257% increase in lobster Shrimp industry collapsed d
Source: Source::National NationalFisheries Fisheries Authority, Ministr try of Agriculture and Fisheries, Authority, Ministry Ministry of Agriculture and 2018. Fisheries, 8. 2021.
Source: Fisheries Division, Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fish Fi sher sh erie er ies, ie s, 2018. 201 018. 8. Fisheries,
Reasons Reasons - Competition - Competition Compfrom etitioncheaper ffrom rom ccheaper heaper imported imported fish fish - energy Rising e nergy ccosts osts - Rising Rising energy costs - Scarcity of red tilapia of red seed tilapia - Scarcity stock seed seed stock stock
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Source: National Fisheries Authority, Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, 2021.
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Food securityy issue - dependency of imported sseafood eafood - Local fishers vss iinternational nternational m arkets markets
Source: National Fisheries Authority, Source: Source e: Fisheries Division, Ministry Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, of Industry, Ind ndustry, Commerce, Agriculture2021. and Fisheries, 2018.
FISHING FLEET & FISHERS IN JAMAICA
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40% increase in registered regi isttered d fishers fish hers
Source: National Fisheries Authority, Ministry of Source: e: Fisheries Division, Ministry of Industry, Comm merce, Agriculture and Fisheries, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries, 2021. 2018.
73% 7 3% iincrease ncrease iin n registered vessels
Source: National Fisheries
Authority, Ministry of Ministry of Source: : Fisheries Division, Agriculture and Fisheries, Industr try, Commerce, Agriculture and Industry, 2021. Fisher ries, 2018. Fisheries,
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END OF PART 1
NEXUS BETWEEN IUU FISHING AND TRANSNATIONAL CRIMES
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WEB OF TRAFFICKING AROUND JAMAICA
JAMAICAN CONNECTION – FOREIGN IUU FISHERS VS TRAFFICKERS IUU FISHERS*
DRUGS & ARMS TRAFFICKERS
• • • •
• • • • • •
Honduras Costa Rica Nicaragua Dominican Republic
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Honduras Costa Rica Nicaragua Guyana Colombia Haiti
THE HAITIAN CONNECTION • Turn around time: 2- 7 days • ‘Fishers/Traffickers’ depart Jamaica with marijuana to exchange for weapons and ammunition • Depart with 454 kg – 907 kg (1,000 lbs – 2,000 lbs) of compressed marijuana • Return with 5 – 10 assorted weapons, ammunition and illegal immigrants
•
GUNS FOR DRUGS TRADE IN HAITI AND JAMAICA (2021) 1 x .38 Revolver = 25 lbs Marijuana
• 1 x 9 mm Pistol = 35 lbs Marijuana • 1 x Assaulted Rifle = 80 lbs Marijuana • 50 x .38 rounds = 35 lbs Marijuana • 50 x 9 mm rounds = 40 lbs Marijuana • 20 x 5.56 mm rounds = 15-20 lbs Marijuana - 294 -
THE NEO-BARTERING SYSTEM OF JAMAICAN MARITIME TRAFFICKERS (2021) • Gun for Drugs Trade with Haiti was later expanded to Costa Rica and Honduras
• Transitioned to Marijuana for Cocaine Trade with Haiti - 36.2 kg (80 lbs) of marijuana for 1 kg of cocaine
• Marijuana for Cocaine Trade with Costa Rica, Honduras and Guyana - 1,587.5 kg (3,500 lbs) of marijuana for 1 kg of cocaine
Transnational Crimes
IUU Fishing
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IUU FISHING IS A GATEWAY TO TRANSNATIONAL CRIMES
FISHERY TRENDS IN THE WIDER CARIBBEAN REGION • There is an overall reduction in fish stock in the WCR • Fishing is not perceived as a lucrative career • Fishers are being targeted to engage in transnational crimes • IUU fishing is perceived as a low risk criminal activity with high profit margins
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FISHERY TRENDS IN THE WIDER CARIBBEAN REGION • Difficult to differentiate IUU fishers from legitimate fishers at sea • Increasing number of sea eggs and sea cucumbers being illegally harvested; their consumption is not native to the WCR • Most countries lack the capacity to conduct effective Monitor, Control and Surveillance (MCS) operations
MARITIME INTERDICTIONS IN THE CARIBBEAN • Barbados
2020 - 7 fishing vessels interdicted with: 1,125.82 kg of marijuana; 1kg of cocaine; 2 firearms and 58 assorted rounds. 2021 - 11 fishing vessels were interdicted with: 2,951.7 kg of marijuana; 583.4 kg of cocaine; 1 firearm and 103 assorted rounds.
• Jamaica
2020 - 7 fishing vessels were interdicted with: 8,092.45 kg of marijuana. 2021 - 10 fishing vessels were interdicted with: 1,282.34 kg of marijuana; 922.7 kg of cocaine; 2 firearms and 159 assorted rounds. - 297 -
MARITIME INTERDICTIONS IN THE CARIBBEAN
• Trinidad and Tobago
2020 – 11 fishing vessels interdicted with 56,234.3 kg of marijuana and 565.4 kg of cocaine 2021 - 2 fishing vessels were interdicted with 130.5 kg of marijuana and 39 kg of cocaine
KEY INDICATORS - TRANSITION FROM FISHING TO TRANSNATIONAL CRIMES • IUU fishing from national and international fleets • Dwindling fish stock, collapse of shrimp industry and fledgling aquaculture industry • International competition from cheaper, imported seafood • Reduction in value of fish • Increasing number of fishers and fishing vessels - 298 -
KEY INDICATORS - TRANSITION FROM FISHING TO TRANSNATIONAL CRIMES • Lack of deterrence – inadequate fines and penalties
• Inadequate MCS and Maritime Law Enforcement (MLE) Operations • Vulnerable fishers and boat operators lured into drugs and arms trafficking
GOJ RESPONSE • Augmented MCS Capacity - MACC Brigade - Procured additional OPVs, IPVs, Outstations - Increased Maritime Patrol Aircraft and Rotary Wing Fleet - Implementing Coastal Radars
• Amended 1975 Fishing Industry Act in 2018
• Conducting legal reform to accede to 2009 Port State Measures Agreement • Signed International Declaration on Transnational Organized Crime in Global Fishing Industry on 8 October 2021 • Implemented Youth at Risk Programs - 299 -
THE WAY FORWARD
WAY FORWARD • Government of Jamaica should accede to the PSMA and other Complementary Instruments • Diversification training programs for fishers and vulnerable youths • Public awareness programs on the impacts of IUU fishing & links to transnational crimes • Incentive programs for fishers to report IUU fishing to MLE officials
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WAY FORWARD • Greater Fines & penalties for fishers and boat operators engaged in transnational crimes • Stricter fines and penalties for large-scale IUU fishing; Target Boat Owners • Revitalize the fledgling aquaculture industry • Mandatory forfeiture of vessels engaged in largescale IUU fishing
NOTABLE IUU FISHING CONVICTIONS • In 2013, a Mexican Boat Captain was sentenced to 15 months in US prison for fishing illegally in US waters and obstructing boarding • In 2015, the Captain and 2 crew members of Spanish F/V THUNDER was sentenced to 3 years in prison and fined US $15 Million (€18.4 Million) for illegal fishing in the Southern Ocean • In 2018, the owner of F/V THUNDER was fined US $10.1 Million (€8.2 Million) in a civil suit brought by Spanish Government - 12 year ban from fishing - 12 year ban from receiving fish subsidies
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CONCLUSION • IUU Fishing is a threat to food and economic security in the Caribbean • Vulnerable fishers and boat operators are being targeted by criminals • IUU fishing is a gateway to transnational crimes • Socio-economic programs required to deter fishers from transnational crimes • Greater regional co-operation is needed to deter IUU fishing and maritime transnational crimes
QUESTIONS
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Day 4 | Presentation3
Ministry of Security
Argentina
Prefectura Naval Argentina Argentine Coast Guard
Fighting Illegal Fishing in the South Atlantic Argentine Coast Guard Achievements, Applied Technology, and Maritime Intelligence
CAPFISH Project – 2nd Workshop - WMU – February 2022
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PREFECTURA NAVAL ARGENTINA (ARGENTINE COAST GUARD) (ORGANIC LAW 18 398)
Appointed pointted to perfo perform ons and obligati functions obligations as: Coastal State Flag State Port State Control Contr
MARITIME AUTHORITY National Coast Guard, responsible for: • The Safety of Navigation, and safeguarding life at sea • Environmental protection and preservation of natural resources • Ensuring a permanent and visible presence, oversight and control maritime areas of interest • Serving as auxiliary Fisheries Police, to ensure monitoring of fishing activities for the preservation of fisheries resources
RIVER RIV VE ER SYSTEMS 33,500 Km
MARITIME ME CO COASTLINE 44,800, 8 0,000 Km2 4,800,000
CONTINENTAL SHELF 6,581,500 Km2
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EXCLUSIVE SIVE E EC ECONOMIC CO ZONE
TERRITORIAL SEA
12 NM from the baselines
CONTIGUOUS ZONE 12-24NM from the baselines
TERRITORIAL LS SEA & CONTIGUOUS S ZONE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE CONTINENTAL SHELF
200NM from the baselines
350 NM from the baselines
CON CONTINENTAL ON NTINENTA TA AL LS SHELF HELF (BEYOND D 200 NM)
DOMESTIC C FISHING G FLEET ARTISANAL FISHING (TERRITORIAL SEA) ARGENTINE/URUGUAY FLEET (COMMON FISHING GROUNDS) DOMESTIC TIC FISHING FLEET
DOMESTIC FISHING FLEET
AEEZ
ARTISANAL FISHING INSHORE FISHING COASTAL FISHING OFFSHORE FISHING REEFER
TOTAL: 880
Squid Shrimp Longtail Hake
Patagonian Toothfish
249 161 126 141 203
Argentine Hake
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FISHING G VESSEL L MONITORING SYSTEM M ((VMS MS) MS
Prefectura P Pre ffee Naval Argentina
ARGENTINE E SHORTFIN N SQUID D (Illex ( x argentinus us)
PNA patrol vessel
SPRING WINTER AUTUMN SUMMER
Foreign flagged vessels in transit
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Prefectura Naval Argentina
FOREIGN N FLAGGED D FISHING G VESSEL L MAIN N ROUTES S AND TARGET T MARKETS
Main Routes
NOV-2020 - JAN- 2021
FROM ASIA FROM INDIAN OCEAN FROM EUROPE
Target Markets
FROM THE PACIFIC OCEAN
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FOREIGN N FLAGGED D VESSELS S ARRESTED
80
VESSELS ARRESTED (1986-2020)
PATROL L UNITS
CASA 212-300 ver. S68 – Maritime Patrol
Operation Procedure for Surface Units for the Interception of Foreign Fishing Vessels In Violation of Act 24,922, and of the Argentine Criminal Code Beechcraft Kingair 350iER – Maritime Surveillance
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Ministerio de Seguridad
Argentina
Prefectura Naval Argentina
Identification n and Tracking g Systems
LRIT
AISS (SATELLITE AND COASTAL)
VMS
VTS CENTERS AND COASTAL STATIONS NETWORK
MBPC – VESSEL, PASSENGER AND CARGO MOVEMENTS
Ministerio de Seguridad
Prefectura Naval Argentina Prefe
Argentina
MIRA A –RADAR/AIS MONITORING AND D IDENTIFICATION N SYSTEM
On-board interface
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VIDEO O STREAMING
GUARDACOSTAS SYSTEM M – DATA A SOURCE E INTEGRATION
Prefectura Naval Argentina
Do all the systems … work together? We have: • Different applied techonologies • Different vessel ID keys • Different data formats • Different data sources
Challenges: • Technology consolidation • Vessel ID harmonization • Data integration to facilitate access and interpretation for users, and to streamline the decision making process
Ministerio de Seguridad
Argentina
SIVEMAR R – GUARDACOSTAS SYSTEM M INTEGRATION S IVEMAR REP ORT
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Prefectura Naval Argentina
Ministerio de Seguridad
Argentina
Prefectura Naval Argentina
ANALYSIS S OF F VESSEL L TRAFFIC C – SHIP P TO O SHIP P OPERATIONS
Tracking TTr rac ackkingg of of the th he ve vessel esssel el H HA HAI AI GO G GONG NG YO Y YOU OU 3 30 306 06 ((IMO IIM IMO MO 91 9150614) 150 5061 61 614) 14) 4) From 00:00 18/11 From Fr m 16/11 16 6/1 11 00 0 0:0 :00 to to 1 8/11 8/ 11 119:00 9::00 9 00 Source: Source So Sour urrce u ce:: infobae.com infob in fobae fo bae.co ba e.co e. com m – 15/11/19 15/1 15 / 1/ /11/ /1 1/19 /19 Análisis de tráfico marítimo
Ministerio de Seguridad
Prefectura Naval Argentina
Argentina
INFORMATION N GATHERING (Aircrafts and patrol vessels)
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Ministerio de Seguridad
Prefectura Naval Argentina
Argentina
VESSELS S OF INTEREST T DATABASE E - SIBI 1. Data gathering ffrom our aircrafts 1 i ft and d patrol t l ves s els
2. D Data entry
Reports Statis tics Maps
Anális Aná lis is a c orde acorde idades neces n e de de PNA P NA Ris k index as s igned according to ves s el type and operations
Ministerio de Seguridad
Argentina
DECEPTIVE E PRACTICES S – ID D TAMPERING
Prefectura Naval Argentina
An strategy used by IUU fishing to hamper detection. On the starboard bow the first ID number was covered with paint, and on the port bow, the middle number.
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PARADIGM SHIFT
Ministerio de Seguridad
Argentina
PARADIGM M SHIFT T ON N ARREST T PROCEDURES
F/V V HUA UA LI8 LI8 was detected engaged in IUU fishing operations within the AEEZby the Argentine patrol vessel “THOMPSON” in 2016. • • • •
The captain dismissed the order to stop, and the Authority began pursuit the vessel. The FederalCourt of Justice was notified of the incident, and intervened. The hot pursuit ceased when the offending ship entered Uruguay’s territorial sea and absconded. The Argentine Court of Justice issued an INTERNATIONAL ARREST WARRANT against the vessel and requested Interpol to issue a Purple Notice.
PNA continued tracking HUALI8, on route to China. Due to a fuel shortage, the vessel was forced to pass through the Strait of Malacca.
April 21, the ves s el was arres ted by the Indones ian Navy
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Prefectura Naval Argentina
Ministerio de Seguridad
Prefectura Naval Argentina
Argentina
F/V V LU U JIAO O NAN N YUAN N YU U 177 On 3 April 2015, the F/V LU JIAO NAN YUAN YU 177 was detected operating within the Argentine EEZ, as delimited by Act 23,968 (on Maritime Areas).
Patrol vessel GC-28 “PREFECTO DERBES” detected this vessel by means of radar-echoing, during a routine patrol.
On May 27, 2015, the F/V LU JIAO NAN YUAN YU 178, called at port carrying an injured crew member who had been transferred from the F/V LU JIAO NAN YUAN YU 177. Since both vessels belonged to the same operator, the Competent Authority imposed a sanction to the F/V LU JIAO NAN YUAN YU 178, plus a $ 7,500,000 fine for infringing the Federal Fisheries Regime, Act 24,922.
Ministerio de Seguridad
Prefectura Naval Argentina
Argentina
F/V LU U RONG G YUAN N YU U 668
Flag: People's Republic of C hina. ARGENTINE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC CONOMIC ZONE ON
Length:
70.87 m
G ross tonnage: 1654 Tn. Type of vessel: J igger. Year built: 2015
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Ministerio de Seguridad
Prefectura Naval Argentina
Argentina
199,75 NM from the Argentine baselines
ARREST T OF F/V V CALVAO
Flag: Portugal Length: 61 m B readth: 11.70 m C rew members: 34. Type of vessel: trawler. Year built: 1977
Over the following years, offending vessels and their operators would willingly appear before the Court, the National Fisheries Authority, and Prefectura Naval Argentina. These cases represent a legal precedent and an example of successful international cooperation.
LIVE SYSTEM
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Day 4 | Presentation4
Canada’s Fisheries Monitoring, Control and Surveillance (MCS) and Enforcement and International IUU Fishery Initiatives WMU-KMI CAPFISH Project First Workshop 18 February 2022 Professor Neil A. Bellefontaine
Introduction 1. Canada is a Maritime Nation,(3 - 30) 2. Canada’s Fisheries Compliance Strategy MCS and Enforcement Programs,(31 - 65) 3. Canada’s International IUU Fishery Activities,(66 -137) 4. The Impact of IUU Fishing - A Northern Cod Story, (137 -144) 5. Future Actions and Discussion,(145-150). 6. Annexes to Presentation. - 316 -
• Part 1 – Canada is Maritime Nation
Canada is a Maritime Nation • A population of 38 million (.05% of world pop) with about 7 million living in coastal areas, • Total area of nearly 10 million sq kms, • Canada has the world’s: - Longest coastline (over 240,00 kms),
- Largest freshwater system (2 million lakes and rivers), - Greatest tidal range (16 metres - Bay of Fundy), • 3.7 million sq kms offshore Exclusive Economic Zone EEZ, with an extended claim of 1.2 sq kms.
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Canada is a Maritime Nation • Three oceans: Arctic, Atlantic and Pacific; world’s longest coastline; one of the largest continental shelves • Oceans economy valued at more than $37.1 billion in 2020 – Traditional fisheries & aquaculture sectors are the mainstay of over 1,000 coastal communities, – Approximately $7.44 billion in seafood exports in 2019, – Other oceans sectors growing rapidly (ex. Offshore oil & gas, eco-tourism, marine transportation,)
Canada’s Ocean Territory
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Jurisdiction and Legislation over Canada’s Fisheries • Fish are a Common Property Resource, • National Management - marine and inland fisheries are Federal Jurisdiction, • Several Provinces and Territories have been delegated jurisdiction for recreational inland fisheries, • Provinces also have shared jurisdiction over Aquaculture given private property nature of sea pens (fixed to bottom/shoreline) and on land-based ponds, etc.
Canada’s Legislative Framework • Canada’s legislative instruments to deliver Canada’s fisheries resource objectives include: • The Department of Fisheries and Oceans Act, • Oceans Act; • The Fisheries Act; • The Species at Risk Act • The Coastal Fisheries Protection Act; and • The Safe Food for Canadians Act (administered by CFIA and is currently reviewing traceability & market measures in fall 2021).
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Canada’s Legislative Framework • The Canadian legislative and regulatory framework is designed to: • manage and protect fisheries resources in a biologically sustainable manner; and • identify potential action to be taken, when necessary, to prevent destructive/illegal practices, • participate in effective international actions and solutions.
Jurisdiction and Legislation over Canada’s Fisheries • DFO-CCG is the lead federal department for the management of Canada’s fisheries – with • DFO lead for science, fisheries management, habitat protection, enforcement, hydrography, small craft harbours roles, • Canadian Coast Guard (CCG) is the lead operational agency for all at sea DFO programs – marine safety and communications, search and rescue, marine aids to navigation, arctic supply and corridors and ice breaking.
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DFO-CCG
Jurisdiction and Legislation cont’d • The Department of National Defence (DND) has lead role for coordination of aerial SAR response and territorial sovereignty and defence, • The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) leads in the safety and security of all food, including the inspection of seafood products, processing facilities, and transport certification of exported/ imported products into Canada. • Transport Canada (TC) leads in transport policy, vessel safety, national ports and pilotage, vessel certification and registration, and shipping regulation.
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Evolution of Fisheries & Oceans Mgmt • A Major catalyst -Northern Cod Closure 1992, • Canada’s Ocean Act 1997, • Canada’s Ocean Strategy 2002, • Species at Risk Act 2003, • Marine Protected Areas Policy 2003, • Integrated Fisheries Management Policy 2005, • Sustainable Fisheries Framework 2009, • The Oceans Protection Plan 2016-2021, • Legislative revisions of 2019 to Oceans Act ,Canada Fisheries Act, Coastal Fisheries Protection Act,
Sustainable Fisheries Policy Network The Sustainable Fisheries Framework incorporates a myriad of policies that work together under one umbrella, and includes the following national policies: •
Policy for Marine Protected Areas (March 1999),
•
A Decision-making Framework Incorporating the Precautionary Approach (April 2009),
•
Policy for Managing the Impacts of Fishing on Sensitive Benthic Areas (April 2009),
•
Policy on New Fisheries for Forage Species (April 2010),
•
Policy for Managing Bycatch (April 2013),
•
Coral/Sponge Conservation Strategy for Eastern Canada (April 2015),
•
Fisheries Monitoring Policy (November 2019),
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DFO-CCG has four Core Responsibilities 1) Fisheries - managing Canada’s fisheries, Indigenous fisheries programs, aquaculture activities, and providing for commercial fishing harbours, 2) Aquatic Ecosystems - managing, conserving, protecting Canada’s oceans and other aquatic ecosystems and species from human impacts and invasive species; 3) Marine Navigation -providing information and services to facilitate navigation in Canadian waters; 4) Marine Operations & Response - providing marine response services & operating Canada’s civilian maritime fleet.
DFO-CCG lead agency for the Oceans and Fisheries • DFO is a highly operational department, with a 2021-2022 budget of $4.38 billion comprised of primarily salary, operating and capital resources (new vessels/ technologies), • Approximately 13,000 staff with 90% outside National Capital Region, • Also supported by volunteer entities (e.g. CCG Auxiliary, SCH Authorities, Conservation Watch) • A highly decentralized organization: - Seven (7) DFO Regions - Newfoundland; Maritimes; Gulf; Quebec; Central & Prairie; Pacific, and Arctic, - Four (4) Canadian Coast Guard Regions – Western, Central, Arctic, and Atlantic.
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DFO Regions (7)
CCG Regions (4)
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Canada’s Fisheries and Aquaculture In 2018 Canada produced: • 1 million mts of fish (Inc. molluscs and crustaceans), with 72% from wild fisheries and 28% from aquaculture, • Fisheries and Aquaculture sector accounts for 75,843 jobs, • Fishing Fleet is made up of 18,430 motor powered vessels (down by 10% from 2008), 51% are small vessels less than 12 meters,
Sustainability Survey of Major Fish Stocks •
Of the 176 major stocks assessed in 2019: • • • •
52 stocks (30%) were in the Healthy zone 29 stocks (16%) were in the Cautious zone 25 stocks (14%) were in the Critical zone 70 stocks (40%) could not be classified and have an uncertain status
Environment and Climate Change Canada (2021) Canadian Environmental Sustainability Indicators: Status of Major Fish Stocks. DFO April 2021.
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Canada’s Fisheries Management Performance •
In Canada, the status of 103 stocks has recently been quantitatively assessed by OECD in January 2021.
•
Of these, 81 are assessed to have a biologically favourable status and 54 also are meeting additional management objectives.
OECD. 2021 Report on Fisheries and Aquaculture in Canada.
Threats to Canada’s Fisheries • Much of Canada’s fishing industry operates offshore in what is one of the world’s largest Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ), across three Oceans –Atlantic, Arctic and Pacific, • The EEZ territory equivalent to approximately 31 per cent of the country’s land mass. • Fisheries Managers are challenged to address the many threats (overfishing, pollution, habitat loss, climate change) to Canada’s fisheries and marine resources in such a vast area.
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Threats to Canada’s Fisheries • Key threats to the stocks within and outside Canada’s EEZ include: • illegal fishing for fish species under moratoria, • exceeding the allowable bycatch for species under moratoria, • exceeding TACs/Quotas and/or fishing in closed areas to fishing, • harvesting undersized fish and misreporting catches, • ineffective control over their vessels on high seas by some flag states.
Canada’s NPOA-IUU • In 2005 Canada introduced its National Plan of Action to Prevent, Deter and Eliminate Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing (NPOAIUU), • The NPOA-IUU was developed in accordance with the principles and provisions of the FAO International Plan of Action to Prevent, Deter and Eliminate IUU fishing (IPOA-IUU), • These principles and provisions are set out by the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO).
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Canada’s NPOA-IUU The NPOA-IUU elaborates and recommends solutions to Canada’s IUU fishing concerns with respect to: • Overcapacity and lack of effective flag State control by both contracting parties and noncontracting parties, and • Non-compliance (with no consequences) by contracting parties to regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs).
Canada’s Committed Actions under the NPOA-IUU 1. Review and Improvement of Monitoring, Control, and Surveillance Operations, 2. Improvement of its Vessel Monitoring Systems, 3. Review and Improve its Dockside Monitoring Program, 4. Implementation of the IPOA for the Management of Fishing Capacity, 5. Effective Implementation of International Convention/Treaty Commitments, 6. Implementation of Internationally Agreed MarketRelated Measures.
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NPOA-IUU Committed Actions - 1 • All six (6) committed actions have been actively pursued since the NPOA was introduced in 2005, • Canada has made significant strides, particularly in the MCS and air surveillance initiatives: Air capacity, At sea vessel capacity, and improving third party Observer, VMS, and DMP programs and MCS operations,
• Canada remains committed towards effective implementation of International Convention and Treaty Commitments and Bilateral/Regional Agreements, including strengthening RFMOs.
NPOA-IUU Committed Actions - 2 • Canada has ratified and implemented national legislation/regulations for all key international fisheries agreements identified in the IPOA-IUU as key elements for combating IUU fishing, including: • United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, • United Nations Fish Stocks Agreement, • FAO Compliance Agreement; • FAO Code of Conduct for Responsible Fishing Operations, and • FAO Port State Measures Agreement.
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NPAO-IUU Committed Actions - 3 • Fisheries Management Renewal Initiatives, • Sustainable Fisheries Framework launched (in 2009), • Implemented International Plan of Action for Management of Fishing Capacity. • Legislative renewal, • Revisions made to Fisheries Act, Oceans Act, Coastal Fisheries Protection Act, and enacted a new Safe Food for Canadians Act,(All in 2019). • New Internationally Agreed Market-Related Measures (Seafood Traceability) underway in 2021.
Canada’s Performance against IUU Fishing •
OECD Policy indicators suggest that Canada meets/exceeds its international responsibilities on IUU Fishing in 5 of 6 key indicators, and it remains weak in international market measures,
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Part 2 - Canada’s Fisheries Compliance Strategy and MCS and Enforcement
Canada’s Compliance Strategy – A Three Pillar Approach • A three pillar approach to compliance monitoring, • Compliance involves: • (1)MCS, (2) Education (shared stewardship), and (3) Major Case Forensic Investigations, including intelligence gathering and TRAs. • Compliance strategies in Canada are implemented on a fishery by fishery basis. 32
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MCS defined • Monitoring - means the collection, measurement and analysis of fishing activity, but is not limited to catches, species compositions, areas fished, fishing effort, by-catches, discards, etc. • Control - is the means established to limit and manage the harvest of the resource contained in state legislation, regulations and licences issued to fishers. • Surveillance - involves the supervision and enforcement of the rules as they apply to fishing activity, to ensure a legal and well managed fishery.
Fisheries Officers • The ~660 Fisheries Officers are spread across the 6 DFO regions of Canada, • Fisheries Officers are nationally recruited and professionally trained over 2 years under a national program. • Fisheries Officers carry out compliance monitoring in ~ 180 major fisheries, DFO-CCG Photos)
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Overview of Fisheries Enforcement • Fishery Officers in Canada are the primary enforcers of the Fisheries Act, regulations, and other related legislation (i.e. SARA,CFPA,OA) in Canada. • The Conservation and Protection Program is responsible for the monitoring, control, and surveillance and enforcement of ~180 fisheries across Canada.
Compliance Monitoring •
Fishery Officers are based in regions largely upon the historical fishery trends and coastal fishing community developments emanating back to the 1900s,
•
There are three categories of Fisheries Officers – Inland, Coastal and Offshore,
•
Fishery Officers have taken on more of a “enforcement” role (and less monitoring and data collection) in recent years. DFO-CCG Photos)
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Fisheries Compliance Programs • Compliance monitoring in Canada is generally carried out by Fishery (Enforcement) Officers, • Fishery Officers ensure the conservation and protection of fish and fish habitat, both in the marine and freshwater environments, • Fishery Officers conduct patrols on land, at sea and in the air. DFO-CCG Photos)
An Expanding Compliance Role The compliance role in the past two decades has expanded significantly with regards to: • commercial/recreational fisheries, and the expanding indigenous fisheries access, • fish habitat management pressures, • new Oceans Act responsibilities for MPAs, • new Species at Risk Act responsibilities for protection of listed species and their habitats, •
more intensive aquaculture management (siting and location verification, EIAs, food quality, GMF),
• expanded fisheries management roles (ecosystem mgmt considerations and exploratory & developmental fisheries).
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Greater Enforcement Role in Fisheries Management Plans (FMPs) • Fisheries Officers are involved in the initial development and implementation of modern FMPs, • In Canada, since 2016 the majority of major commercial fisheries are guided by complex Integrated fisheries Management Plans (IFMPs), • IFMPs often incorporate the Precautionary Approach, Target Reference Points, and Harvest Control Rules, and the Ecosystem Approach to Management, • Therefore, these IFMPs must rely on effective MCS and enforcement programs delivered by a professional and competent Fisheries Enforcement staff.
Canada’s MCS Experience • Since 1985, a comprehensive national Fisheries Officer training program has been essential for success in ensure competencies and program standardization, and training is an ongoing activity, • Having appropriate fisheries operational policies to guide fishery enforcement officers is essential, • Ensuring the availability of the best “new MCS technology” on the market – it is a never ending challenge. 40
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Canada’s MCS Experience • No one monitoring, control and surveillance tool will solve all fishery ills. • Fisheries crime are very often sophisticated and well organized in many regions, • Traditional enforcement does not always address advanced types of crime, • New methodologies and technologies are critical to modern compliance monitoring, • Compliance is far more difficult in coastal states with less developed economies. 41
Modernizing the Compliance Program • New technology is essential for fishery officers address serious non-compliance, • Third parties (at sea observers, dockside catch monitors,) do some functions that were previously performed by fishery officers or enhance the overall capacity of compliance programs, • Modern legislation, regulations and policies (i.e. owner-operator requirement for all vessels <65’ LOA ) are critical to the success of FMPs and their MCS and Enforcement Strategies.
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International MCS Collaboration • Borders do not seem to be a hindrance to the movement of illegal fish, • Maintaining a network of contacts both within the country and within the international community is essential to ensuring strong compliance, • Coastal States and RFMOs must collaborate more on IUU fishing and on the movement/ trade of IUU Fish products.
Education and AwarenessProactive Compliance functions • General Promotional Activities (Conservation, MCS, etc.), • Public Notifications (of program results – prosecutions), • Engagement of Clients in the Fisheries Management consultative decision-making process, (Fisheries Advisory Committees), • Education for Schools and Clients, and Promotional Events, • Liaison working sessions with other enforcement Agencies (i.e. RCMP, Customs and Immigration, Border Agency, Food Agency, Environment Dept).
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MCS Tools for Fisheries Management -1 Involvement of C&P Fishery Officers in: • fisheries stakeholder consultations (Fisheries Advisory Committees) and the IFMP and regulatory development processes, • Training and standards of Observers, DMP, Catch Sampling programs, • Creation of enforceable legislation and regulations, • Access to data collection systems – Log and catch records, DMP data, at Sea Observer reports,
MCS Tools for Fisheries Management - 2 • An effective data collection and electronic transfer system (i.e. VMS, Satellite imaging, electronic and Hail out/In systems, • Land-based data fusion operations centres, • Adequate numbers of Patrol vessels, aircraft, and fisheries enforcement officers, • Legal, Penalty and Sanctions systems, • Inter-agency cooperation/coordination, including regional and international,
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MCS Third Party Contracts • Air Surveillance provides multipurpose detection and sovereignty patrols, • At–sea Observer programs cover individual fishing trips, • Electronic Hail-in/out reporting and VMS systems, • Certified dockside monitoring program provide independent verification of landings.
MCS Functions and Tools • Satellite monitoring, • Air surveillance, AUV reconnaissance, • At Sea Observers and Dockside Catch Monitors, • Routine patrols at sea/coastal/site Inspections, • Inspection of business records, including import and export transactions, • Forensic analysis, • Genetic (DNA) Testing,
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MCS Tools MCS tools can vary according to the specific fishery but can include the following: • Fisheries Management or Harvest plans, • Licences, with licence conditions, • Log records, Sales/Purchase records, • Electronic reporting communication systems (Sea/land-based data entry), • PSMA – port audits/inspection reports
MCS Tools cont’d • VMS (vessel monitoring systems) including AIS, • Air, sea, and satellite/radar surveillance and tracking of fishing vessels and their activities is essential to address IUU fishing,
DFO-CCG Photos)
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MCS Tools
DFO-CCG Photos)
New Long range Fisheries Patrol Aircraft
The new Fisheries Arial Surveillance Enforcement Dash 8 long range patrol craft entered into service in August 2021. (DFO Photo)
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MCS Patrol Vessel Capacity • Patrol vessel capacity is essential to monitor within the EEZ and waters adjacent to it on the High Seas, • Offshore patrol vessels are costly assets to build/buy and operate effectively, • In Canada the CCG maintains the civilian multi-tasked fleet of ~ 140 vessels, but does include dedicate offshore patrol vessels to meet domestic, RFMO and other international obligations, DFO-CCG Photos)
Canada has Adopted New MCS Technology • Covert (GPS) tracking devices, • Micro-chips to detect illegal fish, • Covert surveillance cameras,
GPS Satellite GPS Satellite
ALC Device on vessel
• Remote sensing devices, • Electronic logs, • Automated unmanned vehicles (AUVs) & Drones, (DFO images)
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Satellite
GPS Satellite
Ground Station
VMS Database
National Fisheries Intelligence Service • Consequent to a 2007/08 Audit of the C&P Program that advised a need for improved criminal intelligence and information gathering on illegal fishing, the DFO National Fisheries Intelligence Service (NFIS) was created in 2012 and was fully operational by 2016. • The NFIS works out of Marine Security Operations Centres in the Pacific Region in Victoria, British Columbia, and on the Atlantic coast in the Maritimes Region in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and • NFIS currently employs ~100 persons, with 28 experienced intelligence officers and 20 analysts included work on major cases and supporting the DFO regional C&P.
The National Fisheries Intelligence Service • DFO, which has oversight over NFIS, acknowledges that the NFIS has had difficulties from its inception in fulfilling its full mandate, • DFO has observed that greater emphasis is needed on ensuring that fisheries intelligence information that is gathered, evaluated and recorded is of credible intelligence value, and • The NFIS was created to deliver an unbiased perspective on criminality in the fisheries realm.
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The National Fisheries Intelligence Service • The NFIS works to identify and rank the most significant threats and risks to Canada's fisheries and marine habitat, including illegal fish and seafood products imported into Canada. • Among international intelligence experts,the NFIS enjoys a good reputation. • In 2018, the group won an award for excellence from the International Association of Law Enforcement Intelligence Analysts, a professional organization, at a ceremony in California. (DFO Results Report 2018-19).
Apprehending Violators • Anonymous violation reporting systems (i.e. Report a Poacher & Observe, Record Report line),
• Paid informants, • Special Investigative Units, • Covert Operations (Electronic surveillance), • Undercover Operations (on known offenders),
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Apprehending Violators cont’d • Voluntary Community Enforcement i.e. Conservation Watch and C&P Ride Along Programs), • Specialized Fishery Enforcement Officers Offshore, Coastal and Inland,
DFO-CCG Photos)
Penalizing Violators A Progression of Actions can be taken by Fishery Officers: • • • •
Verbal Warnings/Reminders, Written Warnings, Ticketing with prescribed fines, Administrative Sanctions (Courts or Ministerial), • Seizures and Forfeitures (Persons and Persons Unknown),
(DFO-CCG Photos)
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Penalizing Violators cont’d • Prosecution via the Fisheries Act , and other Acts, • Prosecution via Criminal Justice System, • Alternative/Diversionary Measures Agreements (AMAs) (i.e. aboriginals, youths), • Publication of Violations and Penalties (the deterrent effect). •
https://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/media/charges-inculpations-eng.htm (DFO-CCG Photos)
Canada’s Fisheries Violations by Region 2016-2021 (as of Oct 13th)
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Conclusions • In the past MCS was an after thought in the fisheries management process, Yet a robust fisheries management plan will fail without a coordinated, balanced MCS response, • The FAO Code of Conduct for Responsible Fishing of 1995 for which most major fleets in Canada have signed onto, has helped to focus fishers on compliance - the need to fish responsibly.
Conclusions cont’d • The FAO Agreement to Promote Compliance with International Conservation and Management Measures on the High Seas (1995) forms an integral link to the Code of Conduct, • The FAO Port State Measures Agreement (2010) has also improved fisheries compliance, • A national Compliance Strategy is important to enhance voluntary compliance and deters illegal fishing behaviours.
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Moving Into the Future Compliance Monitoring needs: •
Modern integrated fisheries management plans (IFMPs) using conservation risk factors,
•
A balance between education and shared stewardship/ traditional enforcement and major forensic investigations,
•
To effectively address large scale IUU fishing and supply chain fraud and collusion (organized crime),
•
Involve other partner agencies both domestically and internationally.
Part 3 - Canada’s International IUU Fishery Activities
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Canada’s International IUU Fishery Activities 1. Strengthening its Seafood Traceability Legislation and monitoring program (2021-2022), 2. Canada is participating in RFMO Reforms (2019-22) 3. North Pacific Guard (formerly Operation Driftnet 1993), 4. Canada - EU Partnership on IUU Fishing (2016), 5. Central Arctic Oceans Agreement (2019), 6. Canada partners with Global Fish Watch (2019), 7. Establishment of the Dark Vessel initiative (2021-22), 8. Strengthening Fisheries Intelligence in the Pacific (2021-22).
Canada’s Seafood Traceability and Market Measures Initiative
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Canada’s Boat to Plate Traceability • In mid 2021 the Government of Canada's committed to a boat-to-plate traceability of all fish and seafood products entering or produced in Canada. • A 120-day consultation was initiated from August 13 to December 11, 2021, to gather views on proposals to address Seafood Traceability (an Internationally Agreed Market Measure), • The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) is undertaking this work along with Agriculture and and Agri-Food Canada, and Fisheries and Oceans Canada.
Fish and Seafood Traceability • Canada has made a commitment to tackle food fraud, including mislabeling and fish species substitution, • Canadian tracing of the seafood supply chain from foreign and domestic sources of both wild fishery and aquaculture sources will be increased, • The Traceability initiative will provide greater assurance that seafood products are accurately labelled, better protecting Canadians from unsafe or misrepresented food and combat IUU Fishing.
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Canada’s Fish and Seafood Sector • Canadian marine and freshwaters contain more than 160 species of fish and seafood, • Fresh, frozen, smoked and canned products are in high demand in every corner of the globe, • Canada exports approximately $7.4 billion worth of fish and seafood annually to over 120 countries, and • Canada imports about $4. billion in fish and seafood from just over 140 countries. (OECD Jan 2021)
Canada’s Fish & Seafood Sector • The top exported species in 2019 (by volume) were Lobster, Atlantic Salmon, Shrimp, Snow Crab, and other crab. • The top species imported into Canada (by volume) were Salmon (all species), Shrimp (all species), Tunas, and all species of crab. • ~17.4% of Canadians include fish or shellfish as a source of protein in their diet on any given day. The per capita fish and seafood consumption in Canada has been stable for the past 20 years. OECD Jan.2021)
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IUU Fish Imported into Canada • Oceana Canada reported in November 2020 that ~ $160.m of IUU seafood products enter Canada’s market each year, • Oceana claimed rightfully that Canadians are unwittingly aiding in the continuation of IUU Fishing, including the poor labor practices on these vessels, and that Canada must address this problem as quickly as possible.
CFIA Role in Traceability CFIA already has a number of tools available to prevent, detect and deter fish species substitution and to identify fish and seafood misrepresentation in Canada. Prevention includes promoting compliance to industry, through measures such as: - The Industry Labelling Tool, - The CFIA Fish List, - Guidance on Preventative Control Plans, - Traceability requirements.
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Canada’s Catch Certification Program • Canada’s program was created in response to the European Union's IUU fishing regulation implemented January 1, 2010 which requires that fish exports to the EU are accompanied by a catch certificate issued in the country of origin. • Fisheries and Oceans Canada is responsible for the administration of Canada’s Catch Certification Program, including certificates and export permits of exporters.
Fish and Seafood Traceability Issues CFIA is considering new Measures to address: • Seafood Misrepresentation and Mislabeling, • Food labelling: Information on fish species (i.e. Traceability - Country of Origin, Catch Method or Farming,), • Absence of consumer access to Information (on food labelling – Brand name, quality and source certification – i.e. sustainably sourced, and best before date,)
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Non-Compliance Deterrents To deter non-compliance to Seafood Traceability, there is a range of possible actions that can be considered, including: • Seizing or detaining fish and seafood products, • Imposing administrative monetary penalties, • Prosecution of seller of the fish/seafood product with no traceable background, • Suspending or revoking an Import and/or Export licence,
Canada’s Market-related Measures to address IUU Fishing.(1 of 2) The new measures also include: • Developing market-related measures, where necessary, to prevent importation of fish and fish products from vessels and/or States identified by RFMOs as engaging in or supporting IUU fishing, • Harmonizing catch documentation and certification schemes adopted by RFMOs, • supporting new provisions in the Harmonized Commodity Description,
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CDA’s Market-related Measures to address IUU Fishing. (2 of 2) The measures also include cont’d: • Introducing a Coding System to specifically identify tunas, swordfish, and several types of billfish to allow better tracking of the trade and catch of these species in order to combat IUU fishing; and • The Catch Documentation Scheme (CDS), already in place in Canada, to be reviewed to determine if improvements can be made enhance Catch Documentation Schemes in collaboration with RFMOs,
RFMO Reforms
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Canada Participates in Strengthening of RFMOs • Canada continues to support for the adoption of new measures to strengthen the institutional regimes of RFMOs through: • reviews of the varied mandates and roles of RFMOs to harmonize approaches to resource management and incorporate changes in international law, • the integration of ecosystem, precautionary, and biodiversity considerations into RFMO management,
Reform of RFMOs Canada is also supporting the introduction of RFMO reforms such as: • a greater role for coastal States, • the provision of necessary resources to carry out the RFMOs’ most basic functions, • the enhancement of RFMO credibility by improving their decision-making, • the adoption of additional compliance mechanisms in RFMOs (i.e. common standards for inspections, boardings, observers, data sharing, and transshipment),
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Canada and RFMOs As Canada is surrounded by three oceans: Atlantic, Pacific, and Arctic, • There is a need for effective relations and collaboration with international partners essential to managing shared/transboundary fisheries. • Canada is working with other countries and the FAO to lead RFMOs towards a sustainable, science-based management approach that will ensure the sustainability of fisheries for future generations.
Canada and RFMOs • Under international law, countries are required to cooperate to manage high seas, straddling and highly migratory fish stocks, • The main purpose of regional fisheries management organizations is to manage, conserve and protect these fish stocks within the mandate of their respective convention, • Canada is playing a recognized leadership role in strengthening several RFMOs by implementing greater enforcement and more accountable decision-making, and promoting global norms on responsible fishing.
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Canada is a members of 7 Key RFMOs 1) Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO), 2) Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC), 3) International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), 4) North Atlantic Salmon Conservation Organization (NASCO), 5) North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission (NPAFC) 6) North Pacific Fisheries Commission (NPFC), 7) Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC),
Canada is also a member of a number of other RFOs and RFMOs such as the Pacific Salmon Commission, International Pacific Halibut Commissions with the USA, etc.
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO)
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NAFO – And a Challenging Atlantic Ocean Exclusive Economic Zone • Canada’s EEZ does not take in extended continental shelf in the Atlantic Ocean.(Art.76 UNCLOS). •
Both fish populations and ecosystems straddle the 200 nm limit in the northwest Atlantic.
•
Canada participates in the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO) with 17 other countries to manage fishery transboundary resources in the NAFO regulatory area.
Operation North Pacific Guard (formerly Operation Driftnet)
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Operation North Pacific Guard - 1 (Formerly Op. Driftnet) • Canada, alongside its Pacific partners engages in annual operations to secure the North Pacific from the threat of IUU fishing including illegal driftnets. • These operations include use of satellite surveillance, information sharing, inspector “Shipriders” aboard US Coast Guard high seas patrol vessels, and deployment of a Canadian long range maritime patrol aircraft.
North Pacific Guard - 2 • In 1993 Operation Driftnet patrols began after the United Nations imposed a moratorium on large-scale High Seas driftnet fishing and banned nets more than 2.5 kilometres in length. • Canada today supports efforts to monitor fishing activity in the NPAFC Convention Area, a four-million-square-km expanse of the North Pacific, as part of an MCS initiative known as North Pacific Guard.
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Operation North Pacific Guard - 3 • North Pacific Guard operations support the monitoring, control and surveillance over multiple Regional Fisheries Management Organization convention areas the • North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission, • North Pacific Fisheries Commission, and • Western & Central Pacific Fisheries Commission.
Operation North Pacific Guard - 4 • For example, North Pacific Guard is one of the ways that the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission (NPAFC) enforces the United Nations ban on high seas driftnets. • Members of the NPAFC include - Canada, the United States, the Russian Federation, the Republic of Korea and Japan. • China has been a co-operating non-party of this organization.
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Operation North Pacific Guard - 5 • On May 10, 2021, U.S. Coast Guard, Canada, and Rep of Korea, uncover 450 shark fins and 32 potential violations during international fisheries boardings in the North Pacific,
(U.S. Coast Guard photos)
Operation North Pacific Guard - 6 • An integrated boarding team composed of inspectors from Canada, the Republic of Korea and the United States Coast Guard Cutter Bertholf are conducting high seas boardings and inspections in the North Pacific Ocean as part of Operation North Pacific Guard on Sept 23, 2021. (U.S. Coast Guard photos)
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Operation North Pacific Guard - 7 • Operation North Pacific Guard is an annual multimission effort between five Pacific Rim countries and three regional fisheries management organizations to include • Western Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC), • North Pacific Fisheries Commission (NPFC), • and North Pacific Anadromous Fishing Commission (NPAFC). • Violations uncovered are the responsibility of flag states to investigate and hold crews accountable, as appropriate.
North Pacific Guard - 8 • Fishery Officers from Fisheries and Oceans and USCG Enforcement Officers Canada work with the Canadian Forces to coordinate aerial surveillance of the region using the CP-140 Aurora maritime patrol aircraft.
(DND Photo)
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Canadian Air Force conducts Joint Operations with U.S. Coast Guard
Canada and EU Partnership
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Canada and EU Collaboration on IUU Fishing • April 2016 - A Joint Statement between Canada and the European Union on efforts to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing, was signed at Brussels on 28 April 2016 under which they work together to address IUU fishing-related challenges • Canada’s leadership in combating IUU fishing has been bolstered by formal cooperation and increased informationsharing with the EU. • For example, the statement calls for strengthened MCS and enforcement activities, and promotes further cooperation on measures at global and regional (RFMO) levels.
Canada and EU Collaboration on IUU Fishing • IUU fishing can devastate the environment and undermine responsibly managed fisheries and threaten the sustainability of fish resources worldwide. • IUU Fishing has contributed to the depletion of valuable fish stocks and taken a toll on marine ecosystems in many marine regions of the world. •
IUU fishing deprives the global economy of billions of dollars and jeopardizes the safety of fishers.
• One of Canada’s major contributions to the fight against IUU is its world-renowned expertise in digital forensics, which has successfully uncovered key digital evidence for major international investigations of suspected IUU vessels.
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Canada - EU Partnership • Canada is actively involved in supporting high seas enforcement through counter IUU patrols, both by sea and air, including joint inspector exchanges to leverage resources in a collaborative multi-national effort. • These exchanges have a long history of cooperation with the EU, with exchanges on both CAN, and EU patrol vessels. • Canada participates in the North Atlantic Coast Guard Forum with the EU, and other nations as part of an Enforcement Working Group where there is sharing of enforcement information, and best practices are developed.
Canada - EU Partnership • Canada works and participates on various working groups with the EU. For example, the Port Inspection Expert Group For Capacity and Assistance as part of ICCAT, as well as the annual NAFO Inspectors Workshop which promotes open and fruitful discussions amongst Inspectors, and exchanges of compliance monitoring strategies. • Canada is committed to continuing to work with the EU, and other global partners such as the FAO, as well as through the World Trade Organization, to combat IUU fishing, while at the same time ensuring that legitimate trade continues.
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Canada - EU Partnership • Canada is also in the process of developing a joint international inspection scheme in the ICCAT Convention, in consultation with the EU (as well as other Contracting parties to ICCAT). • This inspection scheme will champion the cause to detect and address instances of IUU fishing and Transshipments between vessels in the international waters of the very large ICCAT convention area.
ICCAT Joint International Inspection Scheme Proposal • In June 2021, Canada presented a discussion paper to the ICCAT Working Group on Integrated Monitoring entitled “ICCAT Scheme of Joint International Inspection in the Western Atlantic International Waters of the ICCAT Convention Area.” • As a result, Canada drafted, in consultation with other parties including the EU, a Scheme of Joint Inspection that would apply to all fishing occurring in the Western Atlantic portion of the ICCAT Convention Area. • A crucial feature of this scheme would be to foster cooperation and information sharing between CPCs through joint inspection operations.
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ICCAT Joint International Inspection Scheme Proposal • Contracting Parties interested in participating in the Scheme as inspectors could appoint inspectors and join the operations of another contracting party’s inspection vessels, thus building broader inspection capacity and a better understanding of diverse fishing operations. • Canada will submit this proposal for acceptance at the 2021 ICCAT Annual Meeting being held virtually November 15-23.
Canada and EU on NAFO Inspections • Canada and EU inspectors have successfully conducted at-sea joint patrols in the NAFO Regulatory Area onboard both Canadian and EU patrol vessels. • Each year, Canadian and EU inspectors come together to participate in the annual NAFO Inspectors Workshop where open and fruitful discussions are held on conservation and enforcement measures. • International cooperation strengthens as participants discuss recent infringement cases towards improving procedures. During these sessions, NAFO Inspectors share how they conduct their inspections in the NAFO Regulatory Area and to learn how inspections are carried out by other NAFO Contracting Parties.
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Canada and EU on NAFO Inspection Scheme • Once COVID restrictions are lessened and international travel becomes more safe, Canada will host the next NAFO Inspectors Workshop. • Canada and the EU have supported each other in the development of conservation and enforcement measures that further tighten and address identified compliance issues within RFMO. • One recent example of this was the joint work between Canada and the EU on Canada’s proposal for measures concerning vessels demonstrating repeat noncompliance of serious infringements in the NAFO Regulatory Area.
Canada – EU Partnership • Canada as well recognizes the value in leveraging the current global momentum to further address IUU fishing, particularly illegal Transshipments, and to advance this important issue across regional and global fora. • Accordingly, Canada is interested in exploring new initiatives with the EU that can further contribute to these objectives. Such areas of focus to further curb IUU fishing would include, ensuring robust transshipment measures are in place throughout respective RFMOs, • (i.e. Pacific – The North Pacific Fisheries Commission and Atlantic – the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas).
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Central Arctic Ocean Agreement
Central Arctic Ocean Agreement • Climate change is having a major impact in the Arctic Ocean. Melting sea ice means that areas once inaccessible are opening up to potential commercial interest and activity, • This climate induced change opens the central Arctic Ocean to the potential threat of major IUU Fishing, • This central Arctic Ocean Agreement covers roughly 2.8 million km2 of ocean territory across the central Arctic ocean.
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Central Arctic Ocean Agreement • The CAO Agreement was signed by Canada and nine other Parties in October 2018. This legally binding agreement prohibits commercial fishing in the high seas portion of the central Arctic Ocean for a period of at least 16 years after it enters into force, • Canada ratified on May 29, 2019 this landmark international agreement to prevent unregulated fishing in the central Arctic Ocean. • On June 25, 2021 a landmark international agreement enters into force legally prohibiting unregulated fishing in the Central Arctic Ocean,
Central Arctic Ocean Agreement area
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Central Arctic Ocean Agreement • In addition to Canada, nine other Parties have signed the CAO Agreement: Norway, Russia, the United States, China, Iceland, Japan, the Republic of Korea, the European Union, and Denmark in respect of Greenland and the Faroe Islands. • As there a a number of RFMOs with jurisdiction in parts of the central Arctic, It has yet to be determined whether the CAOA will evolve into a broader RFMO to ensure a greater international protection against IUU fishing in the central Arctic ocean.
Central Arctic Ocean Agreement • The CAOA commits signatories to work collaboratively to deliver the following two commitments: 1) developing a joint scientific research and monitoring program, and 2) implementing conservation and management measures to oversee any exploratory fishing activities in the CAO Agreement area. • The Agreement also provides for participation and inclusion of Arctic Indigenous peoples, recognizing the critical value of their local traditional knowledge in the conservation of the central Arctic Ocean.
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Canada Partners with Global Fish Watch
Canada partners with Global Fish Watch • May 2019 - Canada is Contributing $1.2 million to Global Fishing Watch to support the continued growth of its free, open-source mapping platform to track IUU fishing vessels. • The funding is part of the $10 million commitment announced by Canada to support the development and deployment of satellite-based technologies that can remotely identify and track suspected IUU vessels. • In 2020, Canada contributed over $200. K to support their Marine Manager portal to support marine spatial planning, MPA management, and scientific research.
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Global Fish Watch • Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans collaborates closely with leading international NGOs, including Global Fishing Watch, to support their mission of improving marine governance through transparency and awareness. • Global Fishing Watch analyzes fishing activity around the world. • Canada has directly contributed funding and data to support the Global Fish Watch mission and their open and transparent mapping platform.
Global Fish Watch • Global Fishing Watch (GFW) is an international non-profit organization committed to advancing the sustainability of our oceans through increased transparency. • By harnessing cutting edge technology, the Global Fish Watch mapping platform allows anyone to view or download data and investigate global fishing activity in near real-time, for free. • GFW was founded in 2015 through a collaboration between Oceana, SkyTruth and Google.
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Larger Fishing Vessel Impacts • While vessel sizes vary throughout the the global fishery, high seas commercial fishing generally includes vessels 24 meters LOA (78.7 feet) or longer. • This translates to about 60,000 vessels, which makes up only 2% of the global fleet of 3.4 million vessels, • These vessels are estimated to be responsible for over 50 percent of global catch.(FAO 2020 State of World Fisheries). • If only 1% were IUU vessels – that translates into 600…
3. Global Fish Watch Map
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Global Fish Watch use of AIS • Automatic Identification System (AIS) is increasing being used in tracking fishing larger vessel fishing activities. • In 2017, AIS was broadcast by approximately 60,000 fishing vessels of which just over 1/3 could be matched to publicly available vessel registries. • The number of AIS vessels is increasing each year, still with relatively few smaller vessels utilizing AIS despite its safety advantages.
Global Atlas on AIS-based Fishing • In 2019 Global Fish Watch, and Fundacion AZTI, and the UN FAO collaborated to publish the first ever Global Atlas of AIS-based Fishing Activity.
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Transshipment Monitoring by Satellite • Transshipment can be monitored from space. If you see two vessels operating together at the same time and you could see their zero speed, it is likely transshipment activity, • Transshipment is a major problem for screening legitimate from illegal fishing, as many IUU trawlers load fish (and marine animals) into cargo vessels at sea. • However, satellite technology may be too expensive for many developing countries to afford.
Eyes on the Seas • Similar to Global Fish Watch - To help them combat illegal fishing, Washington-based Pew Foundation in partnership with the United Kingdom-based Satellite Application Catapult created Project Eyes on the Seas (in August 2015) as a platform to provide a fishing vessel database to developing countries for handling illegal fishing. • The Eyes on the Seas system, which includes AIS and VMS, is designed to be a cost-effective global fisheries monitoring and enforcement tool for governments around the world, including the most resource-poor enforcement agencies to monitor and detect illegal fishing and related activities.
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The Dark Vessel Initiative
The Dark Vessel Initiative • February 24, 2021, the Government of Canada via DFO launched the new Dark Vessel Detection program. • The Department of Fisheries and Oceans is partnering with officials from other countries to help locate so called 'dark vessels,' ships that turn off location transmitters to evade authorities while they fish illegally.
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The Dark Vessel Initiative • According to Sean Wheeler, senior compliance program officer with the DFO international C&P program, this $7 million project is meant as a proof-of-concept - a scheme to work with developing nations and to demonstrate how a network of satellites can help focus the search for IUU vessels.
Sat Image of IUU Fleet off Galapagos
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The Dark Vessel Initiative • Through the Dark Vessel Detection program, Canada is partnering with other ocean nations to better detect and prevent illegal fishing around the world. • Canada is investing in one of the leading, most innovative satellite technology systems on the planet to ensure its fish stocks are protected, its fisheries remain sustainable, and international law is upheld at sea.
The Dark Vessel Initiative • The Dark Vessel Detection program uses satellite technology to locate and track vessels whose location transmitting devices have been switched off, most often in an attempt to evade monitoring, control and surveillance. • The program provides state-of-the-art satellite data and analysis to small island nations and coastal states around the world where IUU fishing has a major impact on local economies, food security and health of fish stocks.
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The Dark Vessel Initiative Fisheries and Oceans Canada has launched this new program in collaboration with: • Department of National Defence, • Defence Research and Development Canada’s Centre for Security Science, • Global Affairs Canada, and • MDA Ltd (space technology company) to detect vessels engaging in IUU fishing, MDA is also a leader in robotics, geointelligence).
The Dark Vessel Initiative • Canada also works with its international partners to support the rules-based international order that ensure sustainable international fisheries and oceans management, • Program partners include the Forum Fisheries Agency (which represents 15 small island nations in the Pacific region), and the Ecuadorian Maritime Authority, National Directorate of Aquatic Spaces (which is in charge of monitoring, control, and surveillance in the Ecuadorian maritime domain).
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Canada and Ecuador Partnership • December 2020 - Canadian and Ecuadorian officials signed a memorandum of understanding to formalize their partnership, • It is designed to enhance surveillance around the Galapagos Islands – a UNESCO World Heritage site, and a Particularly Sensitive Sea Area (PSSA) under IMO. • 40% of fish and wildlife species are unique to the Galapagos.
Dark Vessel Detection Program • Canada has successfully launched this project in two regions of the Pacific by: 1) supporting the Forum Fisheries Agency operations centre in the South Pacific Islands, and 2) deployed the system to three operations centres in Ecuador, including the Galapagos Islands.
• Although early in the platform’s deployment, the system has already being integrated into the region’s surveillance operations, which allows these authorities to more effectively monitor their for IUU vessel activity and prioritize their patrols.
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Strengthening Fisheries Intelligence in the Pacific
Canada’s International Intelligence efforts against IUU Fishing Efforts • In support of efforts to combat IUU fishing, Canada has committed to increase fisheries intelligence collaboration and capacity building. • For example, as a member of the new Pacific Fisheries Intelligence Group (PACFIG), Canada works to build an international community of intelligence practitioners dedicated towards achieving sustainable fisheries in the Pacific Ocean.
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Pacific Fisheries Intelligence Group (PACFIG) • PACFIG recently held a webinar for member states (and guests) with ~40 participants on September 20, 2021. •
This was the first PACFIG event since the first Working Group held in Vancouver in February, 2020.
• The Covid-19 pandemic delayed these follow-up working group meetings, as well as capacity building courses originally planned for 2020 and 2021 which had to be postponed until international travel is recommended. • It is expected that these PACFIG meetings and training opportunities will move soon forward - hopefully in the spring or summer of 2022.
The Impact of IUU Fishing – a Northern Cod Story
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The Impact of IUU Fishing • The world is well aware of the Northern Cod stock collapse off Newfoundland in 1992, a transboundary cod fishery that produced ~200,000. mts per year for ~ 120 years, that has been closed to commercial fishing since 1992), • Key valuable Canadian fish stocks - such as tuna, herring, redfish, and salmon - also share ecosystems or migrate into areas where an increased threat of IUU fishing exists. • With 75,000 employed in the fishing/ aquaculture sector, Canada will continue working hard to protect these livelihoods and the valuable resources they depend on.
The NAFO Regulatory Area
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Newfoundland Cod Collapse 1992
Consequences of the Collapse • The collapse of the northern cod stock resulted in the loss of ~40,000 jobs in from fishing, processing and other support sectors(packaging/marketing/transport) in Newfoundland and the Maritime and Quebec Provinces, • Displacement of many families from small fishing villages to other parts of Canada to find employment, and ~ $ 4 billion in aid for unemployment insurance payments, retraining, etc. • The creation of a more robust risk adverse fisheries management strategy across all Canada commercial fisheries, • A far more intense focus by Canada to improve High Seas management of transboundary /straddling fish stocks, and introduction of UNFA and the Precautionary Approach. - 386 -
Canada contributes to combatting Overfishing/IUU Fishing ¾ Maintains vigilance (enforcement on Nose & Tail of Grand Banks) and entire EEZ, ¾ Improving Science/Ecosystem Approach and Integrated Oceans Management of Grand Banks, ¾ Expedited UNCLOS claim to Continental shelf, ¾ Aid in progress of NAFO Reforms, including joint enforcement, improved compliance and dispute resolution regime.
Northern Cod Recovery? • 29 years after the collapse, the Northern Cod stock is reported to be increasing in numbers, health, normalizing in maturity and behaviour, • US Scientists report that a failure to consider reduced resilience of cod populations due to increased mortality in warming surface water may lead to overfishing despite regulation (Gulf of Maine cod example). • Thus, (1) overestimates of stock biomass, (2) poor understanding of environmental factors in the stock’s recovery, or (3) accelerated reopening of a recovering cod fishery may lead to a further collapse of this fragile cod stock.
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The Impact of Global IUU Fishing • The scale of the IUU Fishery threat cannot be ignored. • IUU fishing accounts for about 30 percent of all fishing activity worldwide, removing up to 26 million tonnes of fish from our oceans annually. • IUU Fishing has been estimated to generate up to $23 billion a year in illegal profits. (Agnew, D et al. 2009). • Canada has taken strong, consistent action to help stop IUU fishing around the world.
Future Actions • Since 2015 Canada has focused its efforts on its Ocean Protection (OPP), a $1.5 billion investment in ocean and marine initiatives to protect Canada’s three oceans. • Todate, major progress has been made on many elements of the OPP, including: • • • •
Enhanced oceans and marine science, Improvements to sustainable fisheries agenda, Protection of marine areas within Canada’s EEZ, Improvement to shipping, marine safety marine pollution, abandoned ships legislation, Arctic corridor/harbour developments (4), and ocean technology developments, • International cooperation on IUU Fishing and broader Ocean Protection, etc. The next priority of the current government will extend to the Blue Economy agenda.
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Canada’s Blue Economy Strategy • Although not directly related to its IUU Fishing efforts, the DFO-CCG Minister has been mandated to lead the development of a federal Blue Economy Strategy, • Canada launched a public engagement process early in 2021 to develop an inclusive Blue Economy Strategy to help guide future government actions and future investments, • The Strategy will be designed to enable Canada to grow its ocean economy to create middle-class jobs and opportunities for fishers, Indigenous and other coastal communities that also advances conservation and sustainability objectives in Canada and globally.
Canada’s Blue Economy Strategy • The Canadian Strategy is expected to pursue actions that - increased representation, inclusiveness, diversity, and equity in Canada’s ocean sectors, and that supports future benefits being distributed equitably. • The Blue Economy Strategy will allow Canada to meet its international commitment to: 1) the High Level Panel’s goal to develop a Sustainable Ocean Plan, 2) the Global Ocean Alliance’s goal to protect 30% of its marine territory by 2030, and 3) contribute to the UN SDG 14 goal - Life below Water.
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The High Level Panel for a Sustainable Ocean Economy • The High Level Panel for a Sustainable Ocean Economy (Ocean Panel) established in September 2018 is a unique initiative by 14 world leaders who are building momentum for a sustainable ocean economy, • A Sustainable Ocean Plan in which effective protection, sustainable production and equitable prosperity are achieved together.
The Global Ocean Alliance • In 2019, the United Kingdom established the Global Ocean Alliance to support a global 30 % conservation target by 2030 at the Convention on Biological Diversity COP 15 in Kunming, China in 2021. • As of August 23, 2021 approximately 54 countries have joined the Global Ocean Alliance.
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Discussion and Conclusions Coastal/ SID States need to focus on: • Legislative/regulatory foundations to policy decisions/initiatives are essential to succeed against the IUU Fishing crisis, • To be successful policy must translated into effective program actions to deliver the desired goal(s), • Human resources - trained and properly funded, with access to new technologies and strong collaborations nationally, regionally, and internationally are also critical to stopping IUU Fishing, • Commitment – All Coastal States must be steadfast towards ending IUU Fishing everywhere.
Thank You!
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Annexes to Presentation 1) Canada and the New BBNJ Convention, 2) Amendments to Canada’s Fisheries Act of 2019, 3) Revisions to Canada’s Oceans Act of 2019, 4) Amendments to Coastal Fisheries Protection Act and Regulations of 2019, 5) Canada and the PSMA,
The New BBNJ Convention
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The new BBNJ • The marine areas beyond national jurisdiction (ABNJ) comprise 40 percent of the earth's surface, and covers 64 percent of the surface of the ocean and 95 percent of its volume. • Canada has supported UN negotiations to expand UNCLOS to include a new legally binding instrument on the conservation and sustainable use of marine life in areas beyond national jurisdiction BBNJ),
The new BBNJ • Canada is participating in the Intergovernmental Conference on Marine Biodiversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction to develop a new international treaty to protect biodiversity in the high sea areas. • The agreement will fill several major gaps in international ocean law. The current gaps include: – – – –
High seas marine protected areas, Environmental impact assessments, Access and benefit sharing to marine genetic resources, Capacity, development and technology transfer related to these legal gaps.
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The new BBNJ seeks to: • Address human impacts on Biodiversity through EIAs and area-based management tools (i.e. Marine Protected Areas). • Enhance requirements for the monitoring and reporting of ABNJ activities such as fishing and ocean mining, and marine pollution and their impacts (or lack thereof) on BBNJ, • Assessment of cumulative impacts (e.g. marine sound, climate change, acidification) in ABNJ,
The new BBNJ seeks to: • Strengthening of surveillance and security mechanisms to protect activities and resources in ABNJ, • Identify “significant ocean areas” as requiring special consideration for industry operations in ABNJ. • Improved international collaboration by coastal states in protecting Biodiversity in ABNJ,
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The new BBNJ Convention Postponed • The UN General Assembly passed the UNGA resolution 72/249 of 24 December 2017, in which it decided to convene an intergovernmental conference, to consider the recommendations of the Preparatory Committee on the elements and to elaborate the text of an international legally binding instrument under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas beyond National Jurisdiction. • The General Assembly decided on August 30, 2021 to postpone the fourth session of the conference to the earliest possible available date in 2022, preferably during the first half of the year;
Amendments to Canada’s Fisheries Act of 2019
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2019 Fisheries Act Amendments to Strengthen Enforcement • Objectives • Update and strengthen enforcement powers, • Enhance fishing gear compliance, • Improved authority of the courts for the receipt of evidence, seizure and forfeiture, • Clarification of authority to cancel and suspend licences for unpaid fines, • Establish an alternative measures agreements regime.
2019 Fisheries Act Amendments to Strengthen Enforcement Update and strengthen enforcement powers of Fishery Officers: í Power to stop and detain vessels or vehicles (Subsection 49(4)); í Authority to exercise inspection and enforcement powers on Canadian fishing vessels in foreign ports or in foreign waters (Section 87.1); í Duty to keep records for catch certification purposes (Subsection 61(3.1)).
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2019 Fisheries Act Amendments to Strengthen Enforcement • Amendments are also proposed to enable Courts to order forfeiture of: í fish or other things that are unlawful to possess, or
illegal fishing gear or equipment found in Canadian fisheries waters or any part of its continental shelf (Section 71.01); and í ILVK SURYHQ WR KDYH EHHQ FDXJKW LQ FRQWUDYHQWLRQ RI the Act (or the proceeds of its disposition) in cases where the person is discharged absolutely or conditionally, or when the court orders a stay of the proceedings (Subsection 72(3).
2019 Fisheries Act Amendments to Strengthen Enforcement • Authority of Courts (Sections 71, 71.01 and 72) • Amendments to enable Courts to extend the detention of a seized thing beyond the initial period of 90 days, • Detention includes any proceeds realized from disposing of a seized thing (Subsection 71(4)).
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2019 Fisheries Act Amendments to Strengthen Enforcement • Enforcement powers and designations (Sections 38, 49, 56.1, 79.61 and 87.1) • Add clarity around roles and liability: - Role of analysts is expanded to cover the whole
Act, and they can issue a “certificate” as evidence in Court (Section 56.1); - Fishery guardians are authorized to receive notifications of occurrences (Section 38); and - Officials, and individuals accompanying them, are exempt from personal liability for carrying out their duties in good faith (Section 79.61).
2019 Fisheries Act Amendments to Strengthen Enforcement • New Alternative Measures Agreements (AMAs) (Sections 86.1 to 86.96) • Effectively address contraventions without the need for a costly and arduous court process. • Certain conditions must be met before AMAs can be used: í sufficient evidence to proceed with a charge; í RIIHQFH LV QRW REVWUXFWLRQ RU IDOVH GHFODUDWLRQ DQG offender accepts responsibility for the offence and the outcome of the facilitation.
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2019 Fisheries Act Amendments to Strengthen Enforcement • Alternative Measures Agreements (AMAs) involve the development of a plan to remedy the effects of the offence. • Charges at issue are stayed pending the negotiation/ implementation of the conditions of the AMA. • However, it is an offence to contravene an AMA.
2019 Fisheries Act Amendments to Strengthen Enforcement • Enhance fishing gear compliance (Sections 24, 29 and 43) • Clarify that fish harvesters must not only ensure that their fishing gear does not obstruct navigation, but also that the equipment attached to it (such as ropes) does not result in an obstruction for other vessels (Section 24). • Clarify that fishing gear, including logs, rocks or other such items can not be used to obstruct the passage of fish (Section 29).
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2019 Fisheries Act Amendments to Strengthen Enforcement • Authorize Governor in Council to make regulations respecting the variation of fishing gear or equipment. • This authority will provide greater flexibility for DFO to vary gear in response to changing conditions in a fishery (Paragraph 43(1)(m)), such as avoiding entanglement of SARA listed Northern Right whales.
Revisions to the Ocean Act of 2019
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Amendments to the Oceans Act • Canada renewed its Oceans Act in May 2019, (amended by Bill C-55), and created a new order power to create interim MPAs quickly, (which was used to designate Tuvaijuittuq MPA in August 2019). • The Oceans Act amendments also introduced the principle of ecological integrity for the first time in Canadian marine law, and also incorporated the precautionary principle into the Act.
Ministerial Order to Create an MPA • The DFO Minister may issue a Ministerial Order, to provide interim protection to an MPA area identified for conservation. • The MPA can be in force for up to five years during which the process to establish a permanent MPA would be would continue. • After the five years, the MPA would be repealed or will have been replaced by a permanent measure, such as a GIC regulation.
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Applying the Precautionary Principle • Under the revisions, the Fisheries and Oceans Minister is now required to apply the precautionary principle when deciding to establish any MPA under the Ocean Act, • Enforcement powers and fines were strengthened to align with updated, current provisions in other legislation (i.e. the Environmental Enforcement Act).
Ecological Integrity • (1.1) For the purpose of paragraph (1) (f) ecological integrity means a condition in which: (a) the structure, composition and function of ecosystems are undisturbed by any human activity; (b) natural ecological processes are intact and selfsustaining; (c) ecosystems evolve naturally; and (d) an ecosystem’s capacity for self-renewal and its biodiversity are maintained.
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Network of MPAs The revised Ocean Act also compels the DFO Minister to create a Network of MPAs, • (2) Subsection 35(2) of the Act is replaced by the following: Network of marine protected areas (2) For the purposes of integrated management plans referred to in sections 31 and 32, the Minister shall lead and coordinate the development and implementation of a national network of marine protected areas on behalf of the Government of Canada.
Enforcement Powers and Penalties • Enforcement Powers were strengthened for Inspections, Seizure, Direction and Confiscation and Forfeiture, Detention of Ships, Compliance Orders, • The levels of Offences for Persons and large and small Corporations upon summary and/or indictment conviction have been increased substantially, • Maximums now reach $2 million for Persons $8 million for small corporations, and $12 million for large Corporations.
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Enforcement Officer Powers • 10 (1) The portion of subsection 39.1(1) of the Act before paragraph (b) is replaced by the following: • Inspections 39.1 (1) For a purpose related to verifying compliance or preventing non-compliance with this Act and the regulations, an enforcement officer may enter and inspect any place, including any conveyance, in which the enforcement officer has reasonable grounds to believe, that there is any thing to which this Act or the regulations apply or any book, record, electronic data or other document relating to the application of this Act or the regulations, and the enforcement officer may, for that purpose, (a) open or cause to be opened any container that the enforcement officer has reasonable grounds to believe contains that thing, book, record, electronic data or other document;
Seizure • Seizure (1.2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the enforcement officer may seize any thing that the enforcement officer has reasonable grounds to believe: (a) was used in the contravention of this Act or the regulations; (b) is something in relation to which this Act or the regulations have been contravened; or (c) was obtained by the contravention of this Act or the regulations.
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Direction and Detention of Ships •
Direction of ship to place
•
39.2 An enforcement officer may direct a ship to move to any place in Canadian waters or the exclusive economic zone of Canada if they have reasonable grounds to believe that the ship or a person on board the ship has committed, is committing or is about to commit an offence under this Act in Canadian waters or the exclusive economic zone of Canada and that the ship was, is being or is about to be used in connection with the commission of the offence. Detention order to ship 39.21 (1) An enforcement officer may make a detention order in relation to a ship if they have reasonable grounds to believe that the ship or a person on board the ship has committed an offence under this Act in Canadian waters or the exclusive economic zone of Canada and that the ship was used in connection with the commission of the offence.
Compliance Order • Compliance order • 39.22 (1) If an enforcement officer has reasonable grounds to believe that a person is committing an offence under this Act — or is about to commit an offence under this Act — the enforcement officer may issue a compliance order directing any person described in subsection (3) to take, at their own expense, any of the measures referred to in subsection (4) that the enforcement officer believes are reasonable in the circumstances, and consistent with the protection and preservation of the marine environment and with public safety, in order to cease the commission of the offence or to refrain from committing it.
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Order to Ship • Order to ship (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), an order is deemed to have been given to the ship and is binding on it, if (a) the order is given to the master or another officer, the authorized representative, the owner or the operator of the ship; or (b) in the case of an order that cannot be given to any person referred to in paragraph (a) despite reasonable efforts having been made to do so, the order is posted on any conspicuous part of the ship.
Seizure and Forfeiture Things Seized, Detained, Abandoned or Forfeited •
12 (1) The portion of subsection 39.3(1) of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
Custody of things seized •
39.3 (1) Subject to subsections (2) to (3.1), if an enforcement officer seizes a thing under this Act or under a warrant issued under the Criminal Code, (2) Section 39.3 of the Act is amended by adding the following after subsection (3):
Release of seized fish •
(3.1) The enforcement officer who seizes any fish as defined in subsection 2(1) of the Fisheries Act may, at the time of the seizure, return to the water any fish that they believe to be alive.
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Offences and Punishment Offence and punishment — Persons • 39.6 (1) Every individual or corporation that contravenes subsection 39.21(5) or 39.24(1), a regulation made under paragraph 35(3)(c) or (d) or 52.1(a), or an order made under subsection 35.1(2) or 36(1) is guilty of an offence and liable (a) on conviction on indictment, (i) in the case of an individual, (A) for a first offence, to a fine of not less than $15,000 and not more than $1,000,000, and (B) for a second or subsequent offence, to a fine of not less than $30,000 and not more than $2,000,000,
Offences and Punishment • ii) in the case of a corporation, other than a corporation referred to in subparagraph (iii), (A) for a first offence, to a fine of not less than $500,000 and not more than $6,000,000, and (B) for a second or subsequent offence, to a fine of not less than $1,000,000 and not more than $12,000,000, and (iii) in the case of a corporation that the court has determined to be a small revenue corporation, (A) for a first offence, to a fine of not less than $75,000 and not more than $4,000,000, and (B) for a second or subsequent offence, to a fine of not less than $150,000 and not more than $8,000,000; or
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Offences and Punishment • (b) on summary conviction, (i) in the case of an individual, (A) for a first offence, to a fine of not less than $5,000 and not more than $300,000, and (B) for a second or subsequent offence, to a fine of not less than $10,000 and not more than $600,000, (ii) in the case of a corporation, other than a corporation referred to in subparagraph (iii), (A) for a first offence, to a fine of not less than $100,000 and not more than $4,000,000, and (B) for a second or subsequent offence, to a fine of not less than $200,000 and not more than $8,000,000, and
Offences and Punishment • (iii) in the case of a corporation that the court has determined to be a small revenue corporation, (A) for a first offence, to a fine of not less than $25,000 and not more than $2,000,000, and (B) for a second or subsequent offence, to a fine of not less than $50,000 and not more than $4,000,000.
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Amendments to the Coastal Fisheries Protection Act of 2019
Coastal Fisheries Protection Act of 2019 • The DFO Minister also has an obligation to close ports to vessels flying the flag of any state that has unsatisfactory fisheries relations with Canada. • Amendments to the Coastal Fisheries Protection Regulations (2019) enable the Minister to authorize a foreign fishing vessel to enter Canadian fisheries waters for enforcement purposes (where the Minister is otherwise precluded from doing so under the Regulations).
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Coastal Fisheries Protection Regulations • Under the CFP Regulations, the Fisheries and Oceans Canada has the legislative and regulatory mandate to control port entry and use of port services in respect of any vessel that is: • transporting fish, • equipped or used for fishing, • processing or transporting fish from fishing grounds.
Coastal Fisheries Protection Regulations • Fisheries and Oceans Canada’s mandate also supports vessels used or equipped for provisioning, servicing, repairing or maintaining foreign fishing vessels at sea. • As a responsible member of various regional fisheries management organizations, Canada supports and encourages collaborative efforts to reduce illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing. • For example, Canada has agreed not to allow entry to vessels on the illegal, unreported and unregulated lists of the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization or the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas, except in exceptional circumstances or for enforcement purposes.
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Canada and the Port State Measures Agreement
Canada and the PSMA The Government of Canada honored its commitment to fight IUU fishing by: • Ratifying the PSMA on July 20, 2019, • Enacting the PSMA Implementation Act on June 16, 2019 to amend the Coastal Fisheries Protection Act to implement the FAO Port State Measures Agreement, • The PSMA prohibits the importation of fish caught and harvested in the course of IUU fishing and to clarify certain powers in respect of administration and enforcement of the Act.
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Canada and the PSMA • This is the first binding international agreement to specifically target illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing. • The PSMA provides Canadian Fishery Enforcement Officers enhanced powers to prevent illegally harvested fish and seafood products from entering the international market through Canadian ports.
Port States Measures Agreement • This UN FAO international agreement sets a global minimum standard for measures to be taken by port states against vessels that engage in illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing. • The PSMA also sets minimum standards to related activities that support such fishing. •
The PSMA recognizes the sovereignty of states to apply more stringent measures regarding foreign vessels seeking to enter their ports.
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Port State Measures in Canada • Canada has a strong Port Access Policy based on the concept of a ‘closed-port’ approach which was implemented in 2003 through the Coastal Fisheries Protection Act and Regulations. • Under the Port Access Policy, the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans has the discretion to grant a licence to foreign fishing vessels to enter Canadian waters and designated ports. • However, the vessels are subject to certain limitations set out in the Coastal Fisheries Protection Act and Regulations.
•
The PSMA • The PSMA of 2009 entered into force in June 2016, and has 69 parties as of this date. • The PSMA applies to fishing vessels seeking entry into a port other than those of their own State, • It is estimated that one in every five fish caught around the world every year is thought to originate from IUU fishing vessels, • Implementing the PSMA is one of the most cost-effective means to curb IUU fishing.
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The PSMA • Every year, approximately 26 million tonnes of fish caught are unaccounted for, robbing the global fishing industry of up to USD $23 billion.(Agnew, D et al 2009). •
Illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing threatens:
– safety at sea, – the legitimate seafood trade, – global food safety and security, – jobs and livelihoods, – marine life and their ecosystems, • This illicit activity puts honest workers in the fishing industry at a disadvantage as they face unfair competition from lowpriced illegally caught fish.
The PSMA • The PSMA is the first binding international Agreement to specifically target Illegal, Unreported, and Unregulated Fishing. • The PSMA’s primary objective is to prevent, deter and eliminate IUU fishing by preventing vessels engaged in IUU fishing from using ports and landing their catches. • Thereby disrupting the supply chain of IUU fish into legal fish and seafood markets around the world.
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The PSMA • By implementing the PSMA, Canada can reduce the incentive of IUU vessels to continue to operate it blocking IUU fishery products from reaching national/ international markets. • The provisions of the PSMA apply to fishing vessels seeking entry into a designated port of a State which is different to their flag State. • Canada, by implementing the PSMA, contributes to the long-term conservation and sustainable use of living marine resources and marine ecosystems.
About Port State Measures • Port State measures are requirements established by states with which foreign vessels must comply as a condition of entry and use of the ports within that State. • Such measures can include: • • • • • •
in-port inspections, denial of port entry, documentation requirements, denial of use of port services, designation of ports that permit landings, and requirements for pre-port entry notification.
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Advantages of Port State Measures • Implementing and strengthening Port State measures have already proven to be cost-effective. They have helped to prevent, deter and eliminate illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing activities around the world. •
By doing so, the measures ensured the long-term conservation and sustainable use of living marine resources and marine ecosystems.
• For example, several illegal, unreported and unregulated vessels fishing in the area regulated by the NorthEast Atlantic Fisheries Commission (NEAF) were decommissioned because they were consistently denied port access by Commission members.
RFMO Measures under the PSMA • Key provisions of the PSMA build on measures taken in regional fisheries management organizations, including: – IUU vessels that are on a RFMO’s IUU fishing vessel list are denied entry into port (or the use of port services), – minimum standards for information to be provided by vessels seeking entry into port, – cooperation and exchange of information, including verification of fishing authorizations, – designating ports that permit landings, – minimum standards for inspection and the training of inspectors, – recognizing the need to assist developing countries with implementation-standing.
• These provisions are consistent with Canada’s port access regime for foreign vessels and interest in bolstering RFMOs.
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The End
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