GOVERNMENTS URGED TO COMBAT ILLEGAL FISHING IN THE CORAL TRIANGLE BY ENACTING TRACEABILITY MEASURES

Environmental Panorama
International
June of 2012


Suva, Fiji – The Coral Triangle Fishers Forum concluded today with specific calls to action for varied fisheries stakeholders in the region to help address the urgent and critical problem of Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing.

The forum called for national governments to recognize IUU fishing as a threat to sustainable fisheries, food security, and livelihoods in the region and to prioritize actions at national and regional levels to address this problem, which include allocating sufficient funds for monitoring, control, and surveillance technologies and enacting traceability and catch documentation measures in fisheries.

Traceability and catch documentation as part of a larger effective information management system were identified as key solutions to addressing IUU fishing during the 3-day forum attended by local fishers, fishing companies, NGOs, regional fisheries bodies, and government representatives.

Adopting these systems in fisheries was recognized by the Forum not only as imperative to combating IUU fishing but also as sound business tools to help improve inventory management, seafood product quality, and market accessibility.

However, it was also recognized that implementing such systems will entail stronger support from key stakeholders across the entire supply chain and that appropriate incentives and skills need to be developed for different fisheries to adopt them.

Recognizing the interest of suppliers, retailers, buyers, and restaurateurs in sustainable and legally-caught seafood, the forum also called upon these groups to directly pressure governments to adopt and implement traceability systems as a core component of fisheries management.

Specific action plans to be implemented by members of the Forum were also identified, which include activities to help raise awareness on IUU fishing as a threat to sustainable fisheries and the solutions available to address it, developing cost-effective tools and innovative technologies to combat IUU fishing, and advocating national government and regional bodies to implement and enforce information management systems.

The 3-day forum gave the more than 100 participants from 25 countries the opportunity to learn from varied case studies in addressing IUU fishing, examine anti-IUU fishing opportunities, solutions and innovations, and identify enabling policies and programs to support IUU fishing responses.

A number of fruitful networking sessions also arose from the Forum, which had big fishing companies, small-scale fishers, and government representatives sharing experiences and initiating possible collaborations on fishing best practices.

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Brazil and Mexico leaders key to fate of sustainable development vision

World leaders have four days to hash out a sustainable development vision, which is rapidly disintegrating in the Rio+20 negotiations – and Mexico and Brazil hold the keys to breaking the current political deadlock.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon is hosting G20 leaders in Los Cabos to address global economic and financial stability – a crucial platform to determine how countries can move beyond the traditional and narrow way of measuring growth and stability by taking into account social and environmental factors.

“Shadowed by worsening ecological and financial crises, world leaders have the opportunity in Los Cabos to change the way we measure growth to better account for social and environmental wealth,” said Lasse Gustavsson, head of WWF’s Rio+20 delegation. “To be meaningful, these indicators must be clear and comparable at the international level.”

From Los Cabos, many G20 leaders will fly directly to Rio de Janeiro where, 20 years after the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, Brazil President Dilma Rousseff will host more than 120 Heads of States and governments. Negotiators in Rio are working – and currently failing – towards developing a common vision for a sustainable future.

“At this point, the G20 Summit and the Rio+20 Earth Summit are entirely intertwined – and the success of both processes rests on the skills of the Mexican and Brazilian leadership. Success at the G20 today would significantly invigorate the Rio+20 negotiations, where language on going beyond GDP and fossil fuel subsidy reform is on the table.”

Failure to move on these critical issues would also represent a missed opportunity to showcase the G20’s role as a responsible and constructive global actor.

Talks are presently uninspiring in Rio, focusing on process rather than substance, two years after first negotiations began on “the future we want”. One of the major outcomes of Rio+20 would be a credible and effective process to Sustainable Development Goals and the naming of key thematic areas now.

“Ultimately, we are in desperate need of a high-level political mandate to deliver a successful outcome in Rio+20 – and this discussion needs to start among world leaders at the G20 under the leadership of Mexico,” Gustavsson said.

An end to fossil Fuels subsidies

Three years ago at the Pittsburgh G20, Heads of State pledged to reform fossil fuels subsidies for the first time. Since then there has been little progress and no concrete action. WWF calls on the G20 leaders to commit to end environmentally harmful fossil fuel subsidies and redirect these funds towards renewable, sustainable solutions.

“World leaders coming to Rio need to show their support for sustainable development by phasing out harmful fossil fuel subsidies completely and investing in a more sustainable future” added Gustavsson. “We call on governments to now deliver on past pledges, with transparent reporting to quantify existing subsidies and progress to date, and an action plan with concrete dates to phase out harmful fossil fuel subsidies”.

Mobilising finance

WWF is also calling on G20 leaders to affirm pledges and innovative sources for sustainable development, including climate finance. In these difficult economic times, countries need to update public finances in an efficient way and this could include auctioning allowances or levies on emissions from the marine and aviation sector. These new forms of financing would activate financial flows and ensure additional income for governments while addressing key environmental issues. Just before the Rio+20 Conference opens, such a move would motivate decision-makers at Rio+20, showing there is scope for marshalling the resources necessary for sustainable development, even under current economic conditions.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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