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- Fishing capacity increasing steadily since 1970s
- Early warning signs of pressure on the stock major species (bigeye and
yellowfin)
- The establishment of measures to ensure the sustainability of the
Pacific tuna stocks are gaining urgency
- Essential to have effective management to avoid over-capacity and
over-fishing
- Various layers of fisheries management measures already in place or
being developed
- Challenge to devise practical and politically acceptable fisheries
management measures
- Central issue is interests and aspirations of Pacific island coastal
States, most notably - economic importance to the development of Pacific
SIDS
- Pacific SIDS will always take a leading role but face resource
challenges to ensure they participate effectively in the developing
comprehensive regional management arrangements
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- GEF supported comprehensive analysis of transboundary marine issues in
the Pacific 1997
- Pacific International Waters Strategic Action Programme (SAP)
- - Integrated Coastal and Watershed Management
- - Oceanic Fisheries Management (Phase I)
- Unsustainable exploitation of living and non-living marine resources
- Address the weaknesses in governance and understanding of the resources
and their dynamics
- Pacific SIDS participation in the development of new regional fisheries
management arrangement
- Oceanic Fisheries Management Project Phase II late 2005
- 5 years - US$11 million
- Assist Pacific SIDS improve their understanding of transboundary oceanic
fisheries resources and strengthen their national arrangements for the
conservation and management of the Pacific highly migratory fish stocks
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- WCPF Convention in force June 2004
- First meeting Dec 2004 (est. Rules of Procedures & work budget &
programme that enabled decisions on conservation and management measures
at 2nd meeting in Dec 2005)
- Advised by the Scientific Committee (proposed number of Working Groups,
including a proposed Ecosystem and By-catch Working Group) and the
Technical and Compliance Committee
- Membership is disparate - world’s most powerful states with large
established fleets operating in the region, and some of its smallest,
for whom the resources involved represent their major economic
development opportunity.
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- Conservation and management measures and resolutions adopted since
December 2004 - 5 resolutions and 15 conservation and management
measures (regulate matters relating directly to fishing impacts on
species, to compliance issues on systems and fishing vessel standards.
- Concerns for the current stock status of bigeye and yellowfin tunas in
the Western and Central Pacific Ocean are such that conservation and
management decisions maintain
current fishing levels while looking for ways in which to reduce fishing
mortality in order to maintain the bigeye and yellowfin stocks at
sustainable levels
- Decisions that support ecosystems approaches to fisheries management in
mitigating the impact of fishing on seabirds, precautionary measures for
the declining stock abundance of swordfish and striped marlin in the
southwest Pacific and the collection of data on sharks.
- In terms of compliance issues the Parties to the Convention also agreed
on the establishment of a Commission vessel monitoring system, a
regional observer programme, procedures for boarding and inspection and
a list of vessels that have presumed to have carried out IUU (illegal,
unreported and unregulated) fishing in the Western and Central Pacific
Ocean.
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- A large number of these measures have been as a result of very proactive
intervention by Pacific SIDS collectively.
- The performance of Pacific SIDS as members of the WCPF Commission is
commendable but it remains to be seen if their application and energy is
sustainable in the long term.
- They also are faced with a wide range of responsibilities as a result of
WCPF Commission decisions which they must implement by upgrading and
realigning their national oceanic fisheries management regimes.
- Benefits –
- Conserving and defining rights
- Challenges:
- Ambiguities and conflicts over issues
- Intent of stronger parties to assert control over tuna resources
- Obligations and implications for national fisheries management
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