CLOSED DOORS AT PARIS BLUEFIN TUNA SUMMIT

Environmental Panorama
International
November of 2010


I’ve been in Paris for just under two weeks attending the 17th annual ICCAT meeting – a gathering of the fisheries managers who decide fishing quotas on bluefin tuna and other species in the year ahead. Every day, I walk the short distance from my hotel, enter the doors of the Marriott conference centre and disappear into Planet ICCAT for (at least) 8 hours.

Inside the conference centre, delegates from countries around the world debate and ultimately will decide on measures to regulate fishing. There are also a huge number of representatives from the fishing industry here observing. In theory, the government representatives here should be acting to protect fish populations. Unfortunately, the reality is quite different: best illustrated by the case of Atlantic bluefin tuna. Scientists agree that stocks of this incredible fish have been decimated by years of overfishing. Over 80% of the stock may already be gone and some believe that number to be even higher. Around the world, governments, scientists, environmental advocates and members of the public have been calling for urgent action to avert the bluefin’s disappearance: an environmental tragedy in the making. None of this urgency seems to have found its way to Planet ICCAT.

Inside the conference centre this year the discussion and debate continue. But where is the action? ICCAT’s track record is abysmal. It has for years ignored the advice of even its own scientists, setting previous years’ bluefin catch quotas way above the recommendations for sustainable catch levels. This must not be allowed to continue for the simple reason that it risks taking the species to commercial extinction.

Planet ICCAT might be a better place if it allowed others in to report on its discussions and decisions. Given that ICCAT is in the important business of safeguarding species from disappearing from our oceans forever, you might think it appropriate to allow journalists or even members of the public inside to watch and record its progress. But no. The doors closed on planet ICCAT two weeks ago – journalists are not allowed in to the meeting and observer organisations risk losing their access if they report on the details of the discussions. The doors are closed until the decisions are made public and the meeting is brought to a close. Even inside the conference, it is very difficult for observer organisations like Greenpeace to follow the real discussions – because most of the sensitive and important negotiations are taking place in private meeting rooms that we do not have access to.

This startling lack of transparency must end. It is time for ICCAT to open the doors so that the public can come and see which countries and delegates sit and argue for continued destructive fishing.

ICCAT is now in its final days. Tomorrow, we will hear the outcome of the discussions on a new quota for bluefin tuna. This year and for several years, Greenpeace has been lobbying hard for the fishery to be closed. But the lack of urgency on Planet ICCAT combined with its lack of transparency mean that another year of destructive fishing for bluefin tuna is likely.

Oliver Knowles is an oceans campaigner with Greenpeace International based in London.

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ICCAT Fails to Protect Bluefin Tuna

The ICCAT tuna summit closes in Paris, failing to protect the bluefin. Where have all the tuna gone? They've been caught.

This year, ICCAT had the opportunity to do two things – rescue bluefin tuna from the edge of commercial extinction and salvage its reputation for inaction. It has now failed on both counts. Once again, ICCAT’s 10-day meeting has resulted in a new fishing quota for bluefin, this time of 12,900 tons – a tiny reduction on last year’s quota of 13,500 tons. Come May, sanctioned by the very organisation which is supposed to “conserve” tuna, destructive purse-seine fishing vessels in the Mediterranean will cast their nets again on this hugely depleted species. Let’s put a marker down here and now – the governments and delegates at this ICCAT session must be noted in history as those people that have failed this magnificent species.

Spare a moment to contemplate just how bad the result is. The quota that governments have given on bluefin tuna is deemed by ICCAT’s own scientists to provide only a 70% chance of recovery. Put another way, that’s a 30% chance of failure. Are these acceptable risks when we are talking about the future of a species?

I have a question for each of the governments who have failed bluefin tuna at this meeting: would you get in an airplane or a car if you were told that there was a 30% chance that you would not reach your target destination alive?

Yet again, the pursuit of short-term profit has won out over the need to protect a species, and our oceans, for the future. This is hardly surprising given the number of fishing industry representatives and fishermen who have turned up here in Paris to lobby for continued fishing.

This conference has sent a bleak message to the world about its inability to reverse biodiversity loss. It is hard to imagine a clearer case for urgent conservation measures than the one for bluefin – the science is clear that the species has been decimated by overfishing. But if our governments can’t even find a way to protect a species like bluefin tuna, how will it find a way to protect the huge numbers of other commercially hunted fish that we know are heavily depleted? It is easy to forget that world governments are committed to fighting the rapid loss of biodiversity from our planet – a commitment recently renewed at the Convention on Biological Diversity in Nagoya, Japan.

The Nagoya commitments are now merely fine words that have not found their way to action. And not for the first time this year. When I attended the CITES meeting in Doha earlier in the year, many nations argued against protection for bluefin because they believed ICCAT was the place to regulate the fishery. But when it came to ICCAT, these words once again were not translated into action. And so the ICCAT process turns through another full cycle and the destructive fishing continues.

If there is a future for bluefin tuna, one that is now highly uncertain, it lies beyond ICCAT’s weak decision-makers and secret negotiations. ICCAT had its chance. It blew it. Now we need to find a way to hold fisheries managers and governments to account- publically- in the hope that we can change the way we manage our oceans: for the benefit of the hundreds of millions who rely on them.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International
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