Success in Tuna

International fisheries agencies and commissions from developing nations here to learn about FFA system

By Gary Hatigeva

FFA Director General James Movick and the program facilitator, welcoming and giving an overview of the meeting and an overview of the agenda

REPRESENTATIVES of Fisheries Agencies and bodies from nations across the Indian Ocean down to the Mediterranean, right across to the Caribbean and Asian seas are here in Honiara for a three-day unique exchange programme, which looks to share fisheries management knowledge and skills with these participants.

More than a third of the world’s tuna supplies come from the waters of the Pacific Islands and by working together, island countries have promoted sustainability and given themselves a much bigger bite of revenues from the global tuna sandwich, something these participants are keen to understand and learn from.

Now, the Pacific island countries are sharing their knowledge and skills with other developing country regions.

Speaking to officially open the summit, Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) Director General James Movick said this meeting will help explain how the region has been meeting this challenge over the past decades and more strongly asserting our rights in what used to be a completely distant-water flag-state fishery.

“We have stood together and claimed our right to both manage and benefit from these valuable fishery resources,” Mr Movick said.

“We want to share this knowledge and assess what lessons might be transferable to other developing regions – and also learn from the unique experiences that others bring to our table.”

Also at the summit is the CEO of the Parties to the Nauru agreement, Mr Ludwig Kumoru, who described how the PNA’s Vessel Day Scheme had been a global game-changer in the sustainable management of tuna resources.

Agencies and Commissions representatives from around the world who are here for the 3 day Knowledge Exchange program, which is currently underway at the Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) Headquarter here in Honiara.

He said the VDS put a cap on the number of days that fishing vessels can operate in our waters, and steadily ramped up the cost of access so that the PNA members receive a fair share of revenues.

He added that before the VDS came into being there was no proper valuation placed on the fishery and we were at the mercy of foreign interests and that has all changed.

Fisheries revenues now account for more than 50 percent of all government revenues in several island countries.

Meanwhile, the FFA Director General explained that participants in the exchange will also have the opportunity to see first-hand the operation of the Regional Fisheries Surveillance Centre at FFA headquarters.

“The fight against Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishery is an area where the Pacific is leading the way.

“Through the development of regional registration and effective vessel monitoring systems we can now exert a level of scrutiny of vessel operations that we only dreamt of previously,” Movick further explained.

The meeting heard that the advent of enhanced aerial surveillance and new e-monitoring and satellite coverage will give the FFA members the ‘eyes in the sky’ that can keep a close watch on the fishing fleets in the region.

This will be supplemented by effective enforcement of catch reporting and transhipment of fish by licensed vessels.

Other areas of discussion will include assessing stocks and sustainability, securing market access and increasing local participation in the value-added onshore processing.

A centrepiece of the discussion will be the RoadMap for Sustainable Pacific Fisheries endorsed by Island leaders in 2015.

Participants from Senegal, Mauritania, India, Sri Lanka, St Kitts & Nevis, Maldives, Indonesia, Tanzania and Seychelles joined officials from regional and international fisheries and oceans management agencies in the exchange.

The meeting is funded by the World Bank’s Ocean Partnership Program (OPP).

Meanwhile, Director General Movick gratefully acknowledged what he described as the crucial role provided by South Pacific Commission’s French translation services in addition to the Offshore Fisheries Programme for non-English speaking participants.

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