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6 Jul 06 Fishing companies announce world's first voluntary closures to high-seas deepwater trawling PlanetArk 5 Jul 06 Greens Applaud Companies Halting High-Seas Trawls Story by Ed Stoddard JOHANNESBURG - Conservationists welcomed on Thursday the first voluntary halt to high-seas trawling by four major fishing companies in the southern Indian Ocean, saying the move was vital to protect marine ecosystems. The companies -- Austral Fisheries Pty Ltd of Australia, Bel Ocean II Ltd of Mauritius, Sealord Group of New Zealand and TransNamibia Fishing Pty Ltd of Namibia -- have pledged not to trawl in eleven deep-sea areas of the southern Indian Ocean. They are the main trawling operators in the region. "This will protect and conserve the bottom of the sea floor ... associated fish fauna and related biodiversity in one of the largest marine protected area enclosures ever," the Swiss-based World Conservation Union said in a statement. "The combined zones have an area approximately the size of Norway. To verify compliance with these self-adopted restrictions, the companies will track their vessels' locations and activities via a special satellite monitoring system." The plight of the seas has been high on the green agenda in recent years, with activists and even consumers demanding that fishing fleets show more responsibility. The United Nations estimates that as much as 75 percent of the world's fisheries have been pushed to their limits and fleets are now trawling increasingly remote areas or plying the coastlines of poor regions such as Africa in search of stocks. Bottom trawling is regarded as a particularly destructive activity as it damages the ocean floor, corals and other fragile habitats. It also tends to be indiscriminate, usually scooping up virtually every living creature in its path. "By not fishing in these areas, which span the southern Indian Ocean, their deepwater corals and the accompanying fauna will gain protection in one of the least explored and unutilized deepwater areas of the world," the World Conservation Union said. "Such deep-sea habitats are among the least known areas of the oceans and by pledging not to fish in them, these companies have taken a great step towards sustainability," said Carl Gustaf Lundin, Head of the Global Marine Programme of the World Conservation Union. Commercially-exploited deep-water fish species in the region include the very slow-growing orange roughy. Piracy is another problem in remote southern seas with the highly endangered Patagonian toothfish a frequent target of high-seas poachers. The fish has been dubbed "white gold" because of the high price it fetches in exclusive restaurants. IUCN 6 Jul 06 Fishing companies announce world's first voluntary closures to high-seas deepwater trawling Marine species protected in eleven deep-sea areas of the Indian Ocean Wellington, New Zealand, Rome, Italy and Gland, Switzerlan (IUCN/SIODFA) - In a global first, four major fishing companies announced today a voluntary halt to trawling in eleven deep-sea areas of the southern Indian Ocean. This will protect and conserve the bottom of the sea floor, or benthos, associated fish fauna and related biodiversity in one of the largest marine protected area enclosures ever. "By setting aside an area almost equal to Australia's Great Barrier Reef National Park, these businesses are sending a clear signal that they want to keep fish on people?s plates for generations to come," commented Graham Patchell, a scientist with the newly formed Southern Indian Ocean Deepwater Fishers-- Association (SIODFA), which represents four companies - Austral Fisheries Pty Ltd (Australia), Bel Ocean II Ltd (Mauritius), Sealord Group (New Zealand) and TransNamibia Fishing Pty Ltd (Namibia), the main trawling operators in this area. Using the scientific knowledge gathered over a decade of activity in the Indian Ocean and in consultation with staff of the Fisheries Department of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), SIODFA have delimited 309 000 km2 of ocean floor in eleven separate benthic protected areas where their vessels will no longer fish. The combined zones have an area approximately the size of Norway. To verify compliance with these self-adopted restrictions, the companies will track their vessels' locations and activities via a special satellite monitoring system. On top of the voluntary establishment of these no-fishing Benthic Protected Areas, SIODFA has pledged to share extremely valuable scientific data collected using complex underwater technology with the soon-to-be-formed regional Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement and the FAO. "Such deep-sea habitats are among the least known areas of the oceans and by pledging not to fish in them, these companies have taken a great step towards sustainability," said Carl Gustaf Lundin, Head of the Global Marine Programme of the World Conservation Union (IUCN). By not fishing in these areas, which span the southern Indian Ocean, their deepwater corals and the accompanying benthic fauna will gain protection in one of the least explored and unutilized deepwater areas of the world. He noted that at present, less than one percent of the world's oceans fall within protected areas compared to over 12 percent of the planet's terrestrial surface. Areas of sea floor whose benthos and habitat are protected on the high-seas, or in areas beyond national jurisdiction, are a novelty and often these areas do not benefit from any formal protection. "These voluntary closures are a unique innovation for effectively managing and conserving deepwater biodiversity of high-seas areas where there are no regional management arrangements in place. We hope that the governments involved in meetings at the United Nations recognize these voluntary protected areas and follow their example to underpin future efforts of the proposed Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement," concluded Graeme Kelleher of the High Seas Task Force of IUCN's World Commission on Protected Areas. He stressed that "it is recognized that voluntary actions of this kind are extremely valuable and should be complemented by enforcement arrangements that apply to other fishing companies." links Related articles on Wild shores |
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