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Report says science, not minister should rule Canada’s fisheries

Telegram file photo

Telegram file photo

Published on February 2, 2012
Published on February 2, 2012
The Canadian Press  RSS Feed
Topics :
Royal Society of Canada , UN , Dalhousie University , Canada , VANCOUVER , Atlantic

VANCOUVER — Fisheries management in Canada places too much discretion in the hands of the federal minister, conferring “czar-like” powers that have meant the country has lagged far behind others in protecting its oceans, says a study by an expert panel of some of Canada’s most distinguished scientists.

The Royal Society of Canada report concludes Canada is failing to live up to international and domestic obligations outlined in UN conventions it has signed as well as laws it has passed.

That’s largely because Canada has declined to adopt science-based targets for protecting fisheries in favour of leaving it up to successive ministers to make decisions, say the authors of the report.

“There’s basically no statue in Canada that dictates what the minister of Fisheries and Oceans must do if a certain set of circumstances arises,” said Jeffrey Hutchings, a marine conservation scientist at Dalhousie University and chairman of the panel.

He noted protection of marine bio-diversity in Canada partly falls under the Fisheries Act, a piece of legislation written in 1868 when climate change and overfishing weren’t concerns.

“At that time, ministers were, in effect, like czars,” Hutchings said. “They had a lot of discretionary power, which the minister of Fisheries and Oceans retains to this day.”

As an example, the panel noted the Atlantic cod fishery collapsed 20 years ago, devastating coastal communities in Newfoundland and elsewhere.

Since then, the fishery has been closed, except for intermittent re-openings.

“But the re-openings took place at the discretion of the minister. They were not based on science, they were not based on an overall recovery plan consistent with our national and international obligations,” Hutchings said.

The panel report is entitled “Sustaining Canada’s Marine Biodiversity: Responding to the Challenges Posed by Climate Change, Fisheries and Aquaculture.”

Panel members are professors from universities on Canada’s East and West Coasts, as well as a Laval University researcher, one from Washington State and one from England.

The Royal Society is Canada’s senior body of Canadian scholars, artists and scientists.

A spokesman for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans said no one was available to comment on the report.

Hutchings said Canada signed the UN Fish Stocks Agreement in 1995 which pledged to follow the so-called “precautionary approach” to fisheries management.

That means setting clear, science-based targets on when a fish population is safe to harvest or when fishing should be stopped.

“In other words, you have a plan,” said Hutchings. “A plan for numbers and targets and limits and everybody knows what the plan is.”

The U.S., Australia, and New Zealand have such targets and so do parts of Europe. Canada has almost none, including none for northern cod.

In contrast, the United States passed the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act in 1996 which requires impact assessments for individual fish stocks. For those that are depleted, it requires a rebuilding plan be put in place within two years.

And there is a legislated requirement that scientific advice be followed.

In Canada, fisheries management plans are developed under guidelines, not legislation, and there are no hard targets, the panel said.

Comments

  • Username
    Paul
    - February 13, 2012 at 09:21:33

    Canada has never cared a rat's behind about its oceans and their bounty. Canada has never even considered itself a fishing nation, in my opinion. Canada has always seen ocean resources as something to be traded for political favours that serve it's Ontario/Quebec based political elite. Canada has done nothing to help the Atlantic cod recover. Canada is building massive Atlantic salmon feedlots in the midst of wild Pacific salmon habitat, Orca habitat. From coast to coast to coast, Canada treats its oceans with disdain. What we need to fix this mess is more local control...and, in the interim, more laws that are binding on the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans.

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  • Username
    Concerned NLer
    - February 4, 2012 at 15:32:26

    Should we dare to hope again at the last second on the clock? I hope Ryan Cleary gets his inquiry into this cover up. Scandalous what they did to NL, the Feds. Left us bankrupt for 60 yrs and stole our fish. Bravo to the Royal Cdn Society for exposing. Wow after a 60 yr mess and us with no say or r ights anymore to our own fish we managed for 500 yrs just fine. It wasn't fished out when we joined Canada, yet they blamed us too. Lets hope it's not too late! Better late than never. If we move quickly on a 2 yr plan?? Is it

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  • Username
    I hope the Royal Soiety takes Ottawa to task for the destruction to the Fish Resource
    - February 3, 2012 at 11:05:46

    The Royal Society of Canada report concludes Canada is failing to live up to international and domestic obligations outlined in UN conventions it has signed as well as laws it has passed. Well done for the Royal Society, I do hope the Royal Society does something about this and takes the Otawa Government to task for the destruction it has caused to the Fishery by depending on their inept Fisheries Ministers to administer the most important Natural Resource in the whole World, the Fish Protein Resource .

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  • Username
    Casey
    - February 3, 2012 at 08:28:29

    As far as the East Coast cod stocks go, it certainly seems like all decisions are political. After the collapse, DFO (scientists) also admitted that their estimates were wrong. They also ignored warnings from fishermen that the stocks were in trouble. After a 20 year moratorium on NL's cod fishery there is still no recovery. WHY? NAFO continues to fish the Nose and Tail of the Grand Banks without any opposition from our Canadian government. There seems to be no logic in the decision by NAFO to fish offshore until the inshore recovers. Go figure!

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