Title: Policy Goals in Fishery Management
1FISHERIES MANAGEMENT
ESM 259
Professor Osherenko
2- Open Access Harms the Sea, As Indicated By
- 1) accelerating loss of biodiversity (Norse 1993)
and collapsing fisheries (Pauly et al. 2002) - 2) sharply reduced abundance of species at higher
trophic levels (Myers and Worm 2003) - 3) widespread elimination of habitat-forming
corals and sponges (Watling and Norse 1998) - 4) proliferation of undesirable jellyfishes
(Brodeur et al. 1999) and starfishes (Buttermore
et al. 1994) - 5) dramatic changes in biogeochemistry (Peterson
and Estes 2001)
3"The world has problems which cannot be solved
by thinking the way we thought when we created
them." Attributed to Albert Einstein 1879-1955
4Conflicting Goals in Fishery Management?
- Promote economic development
- Increase fishing fleets and processing
- Increase efficiency
- Develop national fisheries in EEZs (Americanize
fishing in the FCZ) - Prevent depletion of fish stocks
- MSY (FCMA 1976)
- MEY Maximize economic yield
- OY Optimum Yield Magnuson Act 1996
- MSY
- Protect habitat
- Promote biological diversity
- Cultural concerns
- Prevent depopulation of small remote fishing
communities - Protect aboriginal communities dependent on fish
and marine mammal resources (economic, cultural,
legal concerns)
5Fishery Conservation and Management Act of 1976 -
Goals
- Section 2 included two rather different goals
- to take immediate action to conserve and manage
the fishery resources found off the coasts of the
United States. - Promote domestic commercial and recreational
fishing
6Federal fishery management
- Applies in EEZ from 3-200 n. miles
- On high seas, NMFS regulates US fishing vessels
- 8 regional fishery management councils (RFMCs)
under NMFS/DOC http//www.nmfs.noaa.gov/councils/
- PacificFMC http//www.pcouncil.org/
- North Pacific Fisheries Management Council
http//www.fakr.noaa.gov/npfmc/membership/council/
council_membership.htm - WPFMC http//www.wpcouncil.org/about.htm
- RFMCs prepare and amend fishery management plans
for each fishery (fish stock by species or group
of species)
7US Exclusive Economic Zone
8Sustainable Fisheries Act of 1996(amended FCMA,
renamed it Magnuson-Stevens FCMA, 16 USC 1801 et
seq.)
- Redefined optimum yield to clarify that
economic gains could not trump conservation of
fisheries and that fishing targets must include
consideration of the marine ecosystem. - defined bycatch for the first time
- required NMFS to tally and minimize bycatch, and
- called for identification and protection of
essential fish habitat (EFH) - NMFS 2002 regs on habitat areas of particular
concern
9Optimum yield (MSFCMA sec. 1802(21)
- OYthe amount of fish which--
- Will provide the greatest overall benefit to the
Nation, particularly with respect to food
production and recreational opportunities and
taking into account the protection of marine
ecosystems - Is prescribed as such on the basis of the maximum
sustainable yield from the fishery, as reduced by
any relevant economic, social, or ecological
factor and - In the case of an overfished fishery, provides
for rebuilding to a level consistent with
producing the maximum sustainable yield in such
fishery.
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11Definition of subsidy
- A government policy that alters market risks,
rewards, and costs in ways that favor certain
activities or groups (Roodman 1996) - Effects of subsidies
- Distort the way markets operate allowing some
groups to benefit over others - Promote overexploitation of natural resources
(fish, forests, water, air.)
125 types of subsidies
- Direct funding or lower costs for shipbuilding,
fish ports, fish processing - Subsidies to capital investment, e.g. low
interest loans, loan guarantees, and tax
concessions on investments - Low or no charge for use of natural resource
- Reductions in other production costs, e.g. fuel
tax exemptions - Direct income support (discourages fishermen from
leaving a fishery permanently)
13Management Tools
- Rules (formal and informal)
- Regulation of take
- Regulation of production
- Privatization ITQs, IFQs, CDQs (property
rights) - Place based reserves and conservation zones
(MPAs, Marine Reserves, ocean zoning) - Voluntary standards and guidelines
- Reduce consumer demand
- Education, certification, labeling
14Regulation of production
- Control of fishing effort
- California regulates by
- seasons (openings and closings of specific
fisheries) - gear restrictions
- Other types of regulation
- Size of fleet
- Maximum engine capacity
- Schedules for port exit and entry (limits on
fishing days, compulsory rest periods, etc.) - Vessel buy back and destruction
- Termination of subsidies
- Harvest restrictions
- Minimum (or maximum) size limits
- Bag limits
15Institutional arrangements
- Common property - bundle of rights belongs to a
group of people - communal property (held by an identifiable
community of users with rights to exclude others) - 2) Private property - bundle of rights belongs to
identifiable owner (individual or legal person
like a corporation) - 3) Public property - bundle of rights belongs to
the government or the state - Â
- 4) Open access - In effect, the bundles are more
or less empty in the sense that anything goes,
but note that truly empty sets are pretty rare.
Absence of well-defined use rights. - Â
16Creating Property rights in fisheries
- Property rights are a bundle of rights, composed
of  - 1) Disposition rights - right to dispose of land,
or other items that can be construed as property,
in whatever manner desired (transfer, sell,
donate, etc.) - 2) Possessory rights - right to own the property
regardless of use and to reap benefits from uses
others may make of the property - 3) Use rights - right to use the property as
desired - 4) Exclusion rights - right to exclude others as
desiredÂ
17Individual Transferable/Fishing Quotas (ITQs and
IFQs)
- Entitle individual fishermen (or more rarely a
group) to take a of annual total allowable
catch (TAC) from a particular stock. - A form of privatizing the fishery (the owner
obtains a right to harvest a part of the annual
yield of a fishery) - Not a property right to the fish stocks
themselves - Creates a market in quotas
- Problems arise in initial allocation (by lottery,
eligibility established by prior fishing success,
other mechanism)
18Criteria for limited access systems under MSFCMA,
16 U.S.C. sec 1853(b)(6)
- Limited access systems (such as IFQs) in FMPs
must take into account - Present participation in the fishery,
- Historical fishing practices in, and dependence
on, the fishery - The economics of the fishery,
- The capability of fishing vessels used in the
fishery to engage in other fisheries, - The cultural and social framework relevant to the
fishery, and - Any other relevant considerations.
19What property rights does the ITQ holder obtain?
- Use?
- Disposition?
- Exclusionary?
- Possessory?
20Winners and losers with ITQs
- Opposed by family-based, artisanal fishing
interests - Produces job losses and changes in social
structures - Raises issues of equity in initial allocation
(some systems use set asides for crew) - Favors consolidation or corporatization of fleet
- Encourages high grading
- Doesnt address by-catch
- Favored by those with larger capital investments
in boats and processing facilities - High initial cost to create system and for
monitoring and enforcement - Promotes economic efficiency
- Removes race for fish
- Increases safety of crew
- Lengthens season
- Decreases ghost fishing
21Other rights options
- Customary, communal or territorial use rights
- Held by group or community
- Cannot be traded outside the community
- Examples Pacific island states, Japan, CDQs in
Alaska - Application in coastal fisheries, not high seas
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23http//www.seaweb.org/resources/sac/
24International Fisheries Management
- UNCLOS
- UN FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization)
Committee on Fisheries over 180 FAO member
nations regulates through treaties and
recommendations - FAO Compliance Agreement (in force in 2003)
- Fish Stocks Agreement (came into force in 2001)
- Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries (1995)
- International Plans of Action
- Multi-national regional fisheries management
organizations, e.g. ICCAT
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26- An Alternative Zoning
- A place-based ecosystem management system
- that reduces conflict, uncertainty and costs by
separating incompatible uses and specifying how
particular areas may be used
27Whats So Good About Zoning?
- It dramatically reduces the pernicious effects of
open-access competition - It addresses the seas heterogeneity
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