FFA: Special Pacific Islands Meetings' Outcomes
FFA participated in a number of key meetings this month, outcomes from which are detailed below.
US
TREATY
The regional headquarters of FFA, Honiara,
Solomon Islands, hosted the Special Pacific Islands Parties
Internal Meeting on 28 October and the 1st Renegotiation
Session of the Multilateral Treaty on Fisheries Between
Certain Governments of the Pacific Island States and the
Government of the United States of America (commonly
referred to as the "US Treaty") from 29-30 October
2009.
Initial exchange of views and discussions were
positive. The Pacific Island Parties and the US expressed a
shared interest in renegotiation on three key elements -
licensing arrangements including financial and economic
aspects, the fishing opportunities available to US flagged
vessels and the duration of an extension of the Treaty
arrangements which are due to expire in June 2013.
The
US Treaty first started in 1987 and it has been renewed on
two occasions, with the last renewal in 2003 and to run for
10 years until 2013. The US Treaty enables US purse seine
fishing vessels to fish in the waters of the 16 Pacific
Island Parties which are: Australia, Cook Islands, Federated
States of Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands,
Nauru, New Zealand, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa,
Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.
The
Pacific Island Parties and the US have also agreed that they
continue the renegotiation based on an established timetable
that aims to complete the renegotiation by March 2012, one
year before the actual expiry of the current Treaty
arrangement.
BILLFISH COMMITTEE – SC-SPTBF
The FFC Sub-Committee on South Pacific Tuna and Billfish Fisheries (SC-SPTBF) has been considering short and long term management objectives and options for the longline fisheries targeting albacore, swordfish and striped marlin. SC-SPTBF met in Honiara, Solomon Islands, on 27 & 31 October 2009 and agreed:
* To include other contributing factors such as
economics and oceanography in analyses of South Pacific
Albacore Tuna, Swordfish and Striped Marlin conservation and
management measures
* To progress quantitative analyses
on stock contraction (e.g. Bigeye Tuna) and impact of
illegal fishing
* To recommend to FFC and WCPFC give
high priority to a research program and stock assessment of
swordfish, particularly the South-Central Pacific Swordfish
Stock Assessment (not formally assessed at this stage)
*
To propose amendments to the WCPFC Swordfish Conservation
and Management Measure (CMM2008-05) including to maintain
current catch limits
* To progress current work on the
South Pacific Albacore and Swordfish Plan including
suggested improvements identified by the
Committee.
Chair Peter Graham of the Cook Islands,
thanked delegates for their participation and inputs. He
also announced that following past decisions, Fiji will be
the new chair for the group when Cook Islands concludes its
chairmanship role in May 2010.
SOUTH PACIFIC REGIONAL
TUNA MANAGEMENT ORGANISATION – SPRFMO
A regional
workshop on the South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management
was held in Nadi, Fiji from 21-23 October to prepare FFA
members for future SPRFMO consultations. Although the
workshop was sought by the Forum Fisheries Committee, it
supports Forum Leaders decisions made since 2005 calling for
the development of an appropriate legal framework to manage
deep sea bottom trawling to protect biodiversity in the high
seas. International negotiations are being held on this body
intended to apply to straddling and discrete high seas
fisheries (such as jack mackerel and orange roughy) and
associated ecosystems of the South Pacific. The northern
boundary of the area of governance of the proposed body is
yet to be determined. More information on this potential
organisation can be found on http://www.southpacificrfmo.org/background-information/
FFA
participants in this regional workshop recommended:
*
cooperation and coordination between Western and Central
Pacific Fisheries Commission, SPRFMO and other relevant
organisations including the streamlining of meeting
schedules
* amendments to the draft agreement to fully
recognise the special requirements of small island
developing states including participation in fishing
activity
* that the northern boundary of the area to be
covered by the proposed body include all high seas areas
adjacent to the national waters of FFA members
* FFA and
SPC continue to provide technical and other assistance to
FFA members involved in the international negotiations and
the future work of the SPRFMO.
The eighth
international consultation on the establishment of the South
Pacific RFMO will be held from 8-14 November 2009 in
Auckland, New
Zealand.
ENDS