Transcript Robin Allen

Fishery management
Institutions and the Challenge
of Change
Robin Allen
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission
Ministerial declaration, Conference on
Fisheries Governance
• Recognizing that RFMOs today face new
challenges and responsibilities, and while the
governance of some RFMOs has been improved
by incorporating the principles and provisions of
newly developed international instruments and
tools, including, inter alia, those related to
ecosystem considerations in fisheries
management, other RFMOs remain to be so
improved and, to that end, there is a need for
political will to further strengthen and modernize
RFMOs to ensure that such challenges and
responsibilities are effectively addressed;
A global perspective
United Nations
1992 1995
Food and
Agriculture
Organization
1995
2002 Reykjavik
Responsible
Fishing
(ecosystems)
1992 Cancun
Responsible
Fishing
2005 St John’s Fisheries Governance
1949 IATTC Convention
• Make investigations concerning the
abundance, biology, biometry, and ecology
of yellowfin … ; and the effects of natural
factors and human activities on the
abundance of the populations of fishes
supporting all these fisheries.
UNFSA and FAO CCRF
• If a natural phenomenon has a significant
adverse impact on the status of living aquatic
resources, States should adopt conservation
and management measures on an emergency
basis to ensure that fishing activity does not
exacerbate such adverse impact. States should
also adopt such measures on an emergency
basis where fishing activity presents a serious
threat to the sustainability of such resources.
Measures taken on an emergency basis should
be temporary and should be based on the best
scientific evidence available.
UNFSA management strategy
• Management strategies shall seek to
maintain or restore populations … at levels
consistent with previously agreed
precautionary reference points. Such
reference points shall be used to trigger
pre-agreed conservation and management
action.
Fig SPM-5 IPCC Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis
Best estimate
for low scenario
(B1) is 1.8°C
(likely range is
1.1°C to
2.9°C), and for
high scenario
(A1FI) is 4.0°C
(likely range is
2.4°C to
6.4°C).
http://www.ipcc.ch/SPM2feb07.pdf
Norway FAO COFI intervention
•
Climate change might be the factor that will affect the marine
ecosystem most. The IPCC report, released a few weeks ago,
points to a number of disturbing trends. The Panel predicts that
global temperatures will continue to rise, at an average rate of some
0.2 centigrade per decade. Among the consequences are sea level
rise, declining extent of sea ice in the Polar Regions, and major
changes to ecosystems. Confronting climate change, therefore, is
the biggest challenge facing mankind today … The consequences of
climate change for fisheries can be dramatic – in this century. It may
well be that climate change is the biggest challenge to fisheries
globally over the next decades. Doing nothing is therefore not an
option … the “sit back and wait” approach is likely to be a very costly
one. We will therefore propose … that the FAO undertake a major
scoping study to identify the major issues regarding climate changes
and fisheries. As a second step initiate a global think-tank on how
the fishing industry globally can adapt to climate change. And third,
FAO has an important mission in informing fishers and policymakers
about the likely consequences of climate change for this sector.
Changes in the Eastern Pacific ocean
Catches of BET by longline
and purse seine
Recruitment and biomass of YFT and BET
Yellowfin catch by gear type
(preliminary)
Eastern Pacific Sea Surface Temperature
and Anomalies
National Weather Service Climate Diagnostics Bulletin
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/bulletin/figt5.html