Title: Cost effectiveness of alternative seabird bycatch mitigation options
1Cost effectiveness of alternative seabird bycatch
mitigation options
- Sean Pascoe
- Economist
- 15 March 2007
- CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research
2The players
Long line fishing fleet
Yellowfin tuna
Black (ship) rat
Lord Howe island
Flesh footed shearwater
Eastern tuna and billfish fishery
3The problem
- Seabirds are caught by tuna long-liners operating
off the east coast of Australia - Unavoidable part of the production process given
technologies used - Externality problem
- Environmental cost not taken into consideration
by fishers - Also not reflected in the price consumers pay for
tuna - No economic incentive to adopt alternative
technologies
4Impact on bird stocks
Stock size trajectory assuming current bycatch
mortality Lord Howe Island shearwater population
Listed as threatened in 2003
Increasing risk of stock collapse
5Proposed fisheries management solutions
- Conservation objective of 0.05 birds/1000 hooks
set by the Department of Environment and Heritage
(DEH) - Currently 0.779 shearwaters per 1000 hooks in
waters surrounding Lord Howe Island - Technical measures introduced in 2003 (trial
basis) - Underwater chutes
- Lay the lines directly under the water
- Weighted line
- Sinks faster
- Ban on daylight trawling
- Area closure proposed
- Keep boats away from the problem
6Effectiveness of these measures
- Evidence that technical measures will slow the
decline, but not reverse it - Also not achieve target bycatch reduction
- Closed area will reduce bycatch to target levels,
but at substantial cost to the industry - Takes out main area of activity in the fishery
7Alternative approach for seabird conservation
- Major source of predation on eggs and fledglings
is the black rat - Invasive predators (escaped off ships)
- Removal of rats results in greater increase in
population size than eliminating bycatch
8Cost effectiveness
9Summary
- Two problems
- Seabirds die as a result of bycatch from tuna
fishing (externality) - Seabird population declining
- Result of fishing and invasive species
- Two possible solutions
- Close large area of the fishery
- Reduced seabird mortality to acceptable level
- Results in population increasing
- Very high cost to the fishing industry
- Eradicate invasive rat population
- Greater increase in seabird population
- Very low cost (can be paid by fishing industry)
- Does not stop the problem of seabirds being
killed by fishing
10Compensatory Mitigation net welfare benefit
11Problem extinction of shearwater birds
Stock size trajectory assuming current bycatch
mortality Lord Howe Island shearwater population
12Two causes bycatch and rats
- Bycatch is unpriced externality
- Can be addressed directly through regulation
- Closure of fishing grounds
- Force adoption of new technology
- very expensive
- In terms of per bird saved (approx 10000 per
bird) - And in terms of loss of income for fishermen
(approx 42m AUD)
13- 75 of seabirds listed are threatened by invasive
species while 49 are threatened by fisheries - Reducing bycatch to zero wont save the birds
- Bycatch isnt even the biggest problem facing the
birds - But it is the highest profile cause of mortality
14Rats!!
- Eradication of the rats is a public good that no
individual will willingly pay for - The shearwater species has an existence value,
and as a whole will provide unpriced
environmental services
15Projected population size of shearwater breeding
pairs
16(No Transcript)
17Why should the fishermen pay anything at all?
- They benefit from exploiting the common pool
resource (tuna) that produces part of the problem
(bycatch) - Divert some of that revenue to maintaining a
public good and ensuring the survival of the
shearwater birds - (Kind of like blood money)
18Compensatory mitigation
- Established principle in addressing externalities
indirectly - Eg reforestation programmes to offset greenhouse
gas emissions - Construct new wetlands to offset destruction of
ecosystems in developments - Do these precedents exist because we think its
morally wrong to pollute or destroy wetlands? - Or are we accustomed to making these tradeoffs?
- Or do we just want to ensure some level of
environmental services are still provided?
19- Allows pursuit of concurrent goals
- Economic development
- Conserving biodiversity
- At the lowest cost
20Net welfare increase
- More birds are saved through compensatory
mitigation - At a lower overall cost to society
- Fishermen dont lose their livelihoods
- Tuna prices dont increase
- Rat eradication itself has positive externalities
- Palm seed industry benefits make it worthwhile
- Other rare native species
21What about the birds that die?
- They benefit because they are martyrs who die so
their tribe can live - They become folk heroes, songs are sung about
them, teenage middleclass birds expressing
imagined angst can wear Shearwater Guevara
shirts - Seriously introduce bycatch levy to encourage
fishermen to improve technology and reduce
bycatch mortality. - If levy is high enough it will provide
sufficient incentive to improve technology
22What about the birds that die?
- Ethical issue is it wrong to kill the birds in
the first place? - Depends on whose ethics you use.
- If it is morally wrong you have to presume there
is an absolute truth to base the argument on - Consequentialism, Machiavelli (ends justifies the
means) etc - Deontological arguments (rightness or wrongness
of act is derived from the nature of the act
itself) - Is it wrong to kill the fish?
23- In developing a policy for management of
resources for society as a whole, use the
prevailing norms as a guide to what is acceptable - Clear precedents for making a tradeoff between
what is optimal and what is practical
24Innocent birds sacrificing their lives for a
tuna sandwich?Elisabeth Richardson
25The Big Question
- Does society want to just ensure the survival of
seabirds, or stop them being killed as part of
the production process? - I say yes to the latter!
26An externality problem
- Seabirds are being killed
- Seabirds, like all creatures, are part of our
ecosystem - Tourism value
- Unpriced externality
27The facts
- Seabirds or the flesh footed shearwater is an
endangered species - 8 or 7.2 millions tonnes of global fisheries
catch consists of non-target species which are
then discarded (FAO, 2004) - 49 of seabirds are threatened directly or
indirectly by fisheries (Wilcox, Donlan Pascoe)
28The value of the Shearwater
- Disutility for nature lovers
- - Death ok up to a point?
- - The nature of the death
- The social cost death is acceptable as long as
the most efficient outcome is reached
29Who cares?
- People are willing to pay a higher price for food
that has not harmed animals in the process - Example dolphin friendly tuna
- So there is a hierarchy animals
- What if it were puppies being killed?
30The end of man
- The programs that support breeding programs for
birds while condoning the continuation of murder
of innocent birds in a brutal callous manner
ignores the fundamental point that the only
good economic system is not one that maximises
the sum of utility of humans alone. I beg to
state that the Utility of animals and plants and
all other living organisms even if their
preferences are not weighted as heavily as humans
must be included. To argue otherwise is to commit
the same mistake as the advocates of slavery did,
that only a narrow set of preferences must be
included, that is that the preferences of white
slave owning population be incorporated, this
point is revolutionary now however all of you
must realise that you do not wish to be on the
wrong side of history. To see what is right does
not require economics, however Economics as a
tool should be used to pursue greater goals than
simple maximisation of Sum of Utility of Homo
sapiens - (Ashad Ali)
31Proposed response
32Whats with existence
- Compensatory mechanism
- - The number of seabirds caught as bycatch will
increase as population increases assuming bycatch
is proportional to population size - - Justified killing
- If you control numbers, youre already admitting
that their life is of some importance. Why then
tackle the problem this way? - So, seabirds are merely martyrs for the rest of
the saved or stabilising population
33Conclusion
- Is it ok to say that up to a certain point we
allow seabirds to die? - No!
- Does society care?
- Yes!
- It is simply not good enough to focus on the
existence value - Lets address the real problem birds are dying