We are asked to pay for this
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September, 2006 <HR>High seas driftnet fishing - the practice of targeting valuable species such as salmon, Albacore tuna and squid using nets anywhere from 2.5 to 40 kilometres in length - represents one of the most serious forms of illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing in the North Pacific. Throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, large fleets of High Seas Driftnet (HSDN) vessels openly operated in this area. Gradually, evidence mounted that such large-scale pelagic (open sea) driftnetting had serious environmental impacts including:
(Anadromous fish are species like salmon that are born in freshwater, migrate to the sea where they grow into adults and then return to fresh water to spawn. These species include chum, pink, sockeye, chinook, coho and cherry salmon, as well as steelhead trout.) The term IUU fishing describes a wide range of destructive fishing activities. Many maritime nations, including Canada, have undertaken to monitor and deter IUU fishing, and protect shared fish resources. IUU fishing is viewed widely as one of the main obstacles to sustainable world fisheries and healthy oceans ecosystems. Estimated to be 30 per cent or more of the world's total catch, IUU fishing directly undermines the management efforts of responsible fishing nations. Canada has actively pursued co-operative, international efforts to address this problem. Operation Driftnet is one such activity; membership in the High Seas Task Force on IUU Fishing along with the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Chile, Namibia, the World Wildlife Fund, and the World Conservation Union is another. These and other efforts are part of Canada's strategy to combat global overfishing and improve the way the world's fish stocks are managed. Since 1992, Canada has enforced the UN moratorium on illegal fishing operations through joint operations with the Department of National Defence and Fisheries and Oceans Canada. In 2001, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization prohibited driftnet fishing on the high seas. The 14<SUP>th</SUP> annual meeting of the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission will be held in Vancouver, B.C., October 23-27, 2006. For more information on Canada's overfishing strategy, visit www.overfishing.gc.ca. B-HQ-06-35E(b) <!-- CONTENT ENDS | FIN DU CONTENU --><!-- TWO COLUMN LAYOUT ENDS | FIN DE LA MISE EN PAGE DE DEUX COLONNES --><!-- FOOTER BEGINS | DEBUT DU PIED DE LA PAGE --> <!-- DATE MODIFIED BEGINS | DEBUT DE LA DATE DE MODIFICATION -->Date Modified: 2006-09-29 <!-- DATE MODIFIED ENDS | FIN DE LA DATE DE MODIFICATION --> http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/images/tphp.gif Top of Page Important Notices Not only the north Pacific but all the way down to the tip of Chile. This is what caused the enviro problems we have to live with today.....this and the US government dumping barrels of ddt off the Ca. coast. <!-- FOOTER ENDS | FIN DU PIED DE LA PAGE --> |
so what are you saying Cuda? Should we lift the ban on high seas drift net fishing? Why not let them gill net in shore again as well?
2 am huh, must have been a rough night... |
Supposedly pelagics, which would be the targets of those drift nets, are not considered by the MLPA process. However, they still use the depletion caused by them in the past against us. I agree about the DDT. There are far better ways to spend effort and money (artificial reef building and contamination clean-up) than closing fishing areas.
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