WWF CALLS FOR FIRM LIMITS ON TUNA FISHERIES TO ADDRESS OVERFISHING

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Manila, Philippines – WWF urges the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC) bringing together Pacific Island, Asian, U.S, EU and other countries in their annual meeting (2- 6 December), to adopt pragmatic rules for limiting the catch of species in the Western Central Pacific Ocean in an effort to stem overfishing occurring in the region.

Alfred Cook, Western Central Pacific Tuna Programme Officer, WWF´s Smart Fishing Initiative said: “the implementation of these measures represents the foundation of a sustainably-managed fishery. If pragmatic management measures such as putting limits on tuna fisheries via reference points and harvest control measures are not soon applied, tuna fisheries in the Pacific will face continued declines resulting in substantial negative impacts on our fishing communities and marine ecosystem.“

WWF calls upon the WCPFC to specifically adopt specific reference points and harvest control rules for tuna fisheries in the Western and Central pacific region (see note to the editor), tools that have demonstrated to be successful in managing fisheries sustainably. Implementing these measures would allow managers to act swiftly and efficiently under a pre-agreed standard to ensure that harvests do not exceed acceptable limits, ensuring the sustainability of the resource and the consistent supply of fish to our markets.

“Currently, tuna fisheries in this region are subject to management measures imposed on a relatively opportunistic basis under a consensus-based system, subject to many competing interests and values, including a broad range of competing interests that often lead to decisions that maximize short-term economic interests at the expense of long-term productivity and sustainability that further leads to overfishing,” said Cook.

The implementation of limits known as “reference points” provide benchmarks around which management measures are standardized and allow for explicit, decisive action to occur in the presence of sound scientific information.  If harvests approach a reference point, the WCPFC must take explicit action defined by harvest control rules to prevent adverse consequences such as overfishing.

“It really is a very simple, concrete and feasible concept.  If you are approaching a designated limit that could result in harm to the fishery, you take action to prevent that from happening.  Right now, the WCPFC doesn’t really have a mechanism to do that in a timely and efficient way,” said Cook.

Once reference points and harvest control rules are in place, they will prevent the bureaucratic paralysis that the WCPFC often encounters due to the annual horse trading and ad hoc rules of the current process.  The politics of the WCPFC process can often hinder decisive and sound decision-making regarding the sustainability of tuna fisheries.  Implementation of these measures would prevent essential action from being held hostage over the political concerns of a single member state by providing clear, objective, and scientific measures that constitute pre-agreed standards for taking explicit, science-based action on fisheries conservation.

Also the private sector stands to gain from implementing these measures from a market perspective. Reference points and harvest control rules are part of the conditions to be able to enter the certification process of the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC)—currently the best available certification scheme in the market that awards sustainably-managed fisheries.

“Our ultimate goal is to put a halt to overfishing, to ensure our fish stocks remain in a healthy state so that there is sustainable supply of fish to our markets. We strongly encourage certifying tuna fisheries according to the MSC programme,” said Cook.

Towards this end, WWF and a large group of responsible buyers, harvesters, processors, and traders, are making a pledge to the WCFPC Commission to support well-planned and designed tuna fishery improvement and conservation initiatives to sustain livelihoods, minimise environmental impacts and supply the world with responsibly-managed, high quality tuna through certification according to the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) standards. http://tiny.cc/z8ygow

ENDS

Contacts:

Alfred ‘Bubba’ Cook, Western Central Pacific Ocean Tuna Programme Manager, WWF Smart Fishing Initiative. Email: acook@wwfpacific.org.fj. +6799035008

Patricia Mallam, Communications Manager, WWF South Pacific. Email:pmallam@wwfpacific.org.fj

Notes to the editor

Reference points: A Reference Point is a benchmark value that helps managers decide how the fishery is performing and is often based on an indicator such as fishery stock size or the level of fishing. Fisheries scientists conduct a fishery stock assessment to provide estimates of a fishery stock size and fishing mortality over time. Reference Points serve as a standard to compare those estimates based on our understanding of the biological characteristics of the targeted species. Reference points can mark a limit, which represents a level that managers aim to avoid, or a target, which managers strive to achieve and maintain. Managers can also establish a trigger that is independent of the limit or target that is designed to meet other objectives.

A harvest control rule:  is a pre-agreed action to be taken by a management body designed to achieve a medium or long-term target reference point while avoiding reaching a limit reference point. Simple Harvest Control Rules can be described as an “if, then” statement. An example of a very simple Harvest Control Rule would be “if the fishery stock level falls below the target level, then the level of fishing must be reduced by 20 percent.” Managers may additionally agree in advance what the specific management actions are to reach that 20 percent reduction in the level of fishing, such as a regional closure or gear restriction.

About WWF

WWF is one of the world's largest and most respected independent conservation organizations, with more than 5 million supporters and a global network active in over 100 countries.  WWF's mission is to stop the degradation of the earth's natural environment and to build a future in which humans live in harmony with nature, by conserving the world's biological diversity, ensuring that the use of renewable natural resources is sustainable, and promoting the reduction of pollution and wasteful consumption.

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