Instead, the primary motivation for the anti-octopus farming
legislation seems to be a sentimental vision of the eight-legged cephalopods,
largely driven by the
much-watched, award-winning movie, My Octopus Teacher—along with a
lot of pressure from the animal rights community.
It was a classic example of people’s emotions getting in the
way of rational decision making.
When I finalized that piece, I was pretty certain that I wouldn’t
write about octopuses again—or, at least, not for a very long time—and while
that is hopefully true, it seems like the conflict between fisheries science
and emotional, arbitrary decision making is going to be the subject of many essays
to come.
“At high seas treaty summit, a dispute over fisheries
managers’ role in conservation.”
I found that statement remarkable, because it can be easily
argued that a fisheries manager’s primary responsibility is the
conservation of fisheries under his or her jurisdiction.
“The integrated process of information gathering, analysis,
planning, consultation, decision-making, the allocation of resources and
formulation and implementation, with enforcement as necessary, of regulations
or rules which govern fisheries activities in order to ensure the continued
productivity of the resources and the accomplishment of other fisheries
objectives.”
At the risk of stating the obvious, fisheries management is
what a fisheries manager does. And
“ensur[ing] the continued productivity of the resources” sounds a lot like
conservation to me.
After all, the
Merriam-Webster dictionary defines “conservation” as
“a careful preservation and protection of something
especially: planned management of a natural resource to prevent exploitation,
destruction, or neglect [formatting
omitted],
while no
less authoritative a source than the Oxford English Dictionary defines it as
“The preservation, protection, or restoration of the natural
environment and of wildlife; the practice of seeking to prevent the
wasteful use of a resource in order to ensure its continuing availability. [emphasis added]”
The Food and Agriculture Organization’s description of
fisheries management falls neatly within both of those definitions. And it’s important to note that the latter
definition contemplates the sustainable use of natural resources, and not
merely closing them off from any sort of human access or harvest. “Conservation” does not require complete and
absolute protection.
The problem is that some people disagree, and don’t merely
advocate for conservation; they want to see marine resources completely walled
off from human utilization. Their goal
is not merely conservation and management—which is what
United States law, in the form of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act, provides—but complete protection as a goal in itself,
whether or not there is any scientific evidence that such protection is needed.
The first two paragraphs of the Mongabay article
describe that problem pretty well, in connection with a recent treaty intended
to conserve worldwide marine resources:
“For conservationists, one of the major accomplishments of
the high seas treaty [which was agreed to by many of the world’s nations in
2023] was that it created a means to establish marine protected areas (MPAs) in
international waters. High seas MPAs are
viewed as essential to meeting the looming 2030 deadline to protect 30% of the
Earth’s ocean, especially since countries have only just reached one-third of
that goal.
“Now, the multilateral organizations that manage high-seas
fishing, known as regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs), are
pushing to make sure that their own work is not duplicated or displaced. Some conservationists see the RFMOs’
engagement as a way of inhibiting protection efforts, arguing that RFMOs are heavily
influenced by fishing industry priorities.”
Once again, we see the insinuation that fisheries managers—or,
at least, regional fishery management organizations—are not “conservationists.” Some advocates/advocacy groups, the article
tells us, claim that they “are heavily influenced by fishing industry
priorities.” But is that necessarily a
bad thing, if one of those industry priorities are to keep fish stocks healthy,
so that they may support sustainable—and profitable—fisheries into the
foreseeable future?
Anyone who has followed the history of such RFMOs will have
to admit that, at times, they fell short of taking the measures necessary to
adequately conserve fish stocks, because of industry pressure. But they will also have to admit that without
them, management of highly migratory pelagic fish species would be effectively
impossible, and that, in recent years, we have seen the RFMOs do some real
good. Here in the North Atlantic basin,
for example, we have seen the International Commission for the Conservation of
Atlantic Tunas preside over the rebuilding of once-depleted broadbill swordfish
and bluefin tuna stocks, and recently impose a complete moratorium on landing
shortfin mako sharks, in order to rebuild the population.
Those all seem like solid conservation measures to me.
On the other hand, while the various advocacy groups might
throw stones at the RFMOs for being influenced by the fishing industry, they
never mention how their own advocacy efforts shift focus at the whims of the
big foundations that provide much of their funding. Two decades ago, there were multiple environmental
groups who were focused on Magnuson-Stevens, seeking to keep the law strong in
the face of a congressional reauthorization, and when that was achieved,
working hard to put conservation-oriented people on the regional fishery
management councils. Then the big funders
decided that Magnuson-Stevens didn’t matter anymore, turned their back on
domestic fisheries, and started putting their money into things like 30x30, while
the advocacy community, which relied on the foundation money, followed right
along, shrinking or eliminating their domestic fisheries staff to focus on
international issues.
The regional fishery management organizations, on the other
hand, stayed focused on their mission of managing regional fisheries.
That’s probably a good thing, for as the Mongabay
article notes, the proper name of the treaty is the
“agreement on the conservation and sustainable use
of marine biological diversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction. [emphasis added]”
And sustainable use is just what the regional
fishery management organizations try to promote.
Perhaps that’s why, at a meeting called to draft the treaty’s
rules, held in New York City between March 23 and April 2, the delegates
present agreed to what Mongabay described as
“rules or procedure that would help enshrine [the RFMOs’]
authority to be part of decision-making under the treaty.”
Those rules have yet to be confirmed in a final vote of the
parties to the treaty, but the MPA advocates are already upset, even though the
draft hardly gives the regional fishery management organizations control of the
process, but merely states that
“interactions between the [treaty organization] and bodies
such as RFMOs shall be guided by ‘the need to develop strategies to manage
overlapping mandates and avoid duplication of efforts, including, where
appropriate, by leveraging the expertise and best practices of relevant
instruments, frameworks and bodies, and existing cooperation and coordination
agreements and platforms.’”
That’s hardly unreasonable, yet the MPA advocates’ response
was harsh. Megan Randles, the global
political lead for oceans for the environmental group Greenpeace, raged that
“The organizations that have presided over decades of
destruction on the high seas have made a completely unacceptable power-grab
which would dramatically weaken the [treaty’s] ability to protect the
ocean. They are attempting to re-write
the Treaty in favour of fishing industry vested interests.”
Mongabay also quoted Ryan Orgera, the global director
of the United States-based organization Accountability Fish, as saying that
regional fishery management organizations
“are not equipped as bodies, philosophically nor
logistically, to add value to MPA creation processes…Many of the actors
internal to RFMO processes are publicly opposed to the creation of MPAs in
their respective treaty-areas. RFMOs
fail in ecosystem protection—they don’t think of ecosystems in meaningful ways;
they often treat individual fisheries as discrete entities.”
And perhaps, in that statement, we see the real roots of the
conflict.
Regional fisheries management organizations, informed by
science, seek to manage fisheries for sustainable harvest, while the
organizations opposing RFMO involvement in the process are seeking to create
marine protected areas, not because any specific research suggests that they
are needed, but merely because of a philosophical belief that MPAs, which
prevent any harvest in certain areas, are inherently good—and because
they help attain certain arbitrary goals.
We should probably take another look at some of the language
at the beginning of the Mongabay article, and really consider what it
says:
“High seas MPAs are viewed as essential to meeting the
looming 2030 deadline to protect 30% of the Earth’s ocean, especially
since countries have only just reached one-third of that goal.”
“Essential to meeting the looming 2030 deadline.”
High seas MPAs are not viewed as essential to
maintain sustainable fisheries. They are
not viewed as essential to rebuild—or prevent the decline of—specific
fish stocks. They are only
viewed as essential to meet what is, in fact, an arbitrary deadline of 2030 to
protect an equally arbitrary 30% of the ocean from some sort of activity
that has never been clearly and completely defined.
That doesn’t mean that high-seas marine protected areas cannot
have value. There might be
cases where the best available science will suggest that the only way to
adequately protect a population of fish is to close an area of ocean to all
commercial fishing, or perhaps to all fishing of any kind. But such circumstances are probably not
common enough to justify closing 30% of the ocean just because it seems a nice
thing to do.
Not long ago, MPA advocates were aggressively touting a paper titled “A
global network of marine protected areas for food,” which appeared in the
journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in October 2020
and argued that
“Strategically siting marine protected areas (MPAs) in
overfished fisheries can have important conservation and food provisioning
benefits. We use distribution data for
1,338 commercially important fisheries stocks around the world to model how
MPAs in different locations would affect catch.
We show that strategically expanding the existing global MPA network by
just 5% could improve future catch by at least 20%. Our work demonstrates that a global network
of MPAs designed to improve fisheries productivity can substantially increase
future catch, enabling synergistic conservation and food provisioning.”
However, that paper has since
been retracted, something that only happens when the data
underlying the paper, the analysis of that data, or some other aspect of the
academic process leading to the paper’s production was seriously and fatally
flawed.
So once again, we see an emotional appeal—in this case, the
slogan 30x30, which embodies a clear, if unjustified concept, and can easily be
used in public relations campaigns—supplanting, in at least some advocates’
minds, data-based management efforts.
Advocates for the arbitrary creation of marine protected
areas, and the arbitrary protection of 30% of the ocean, rail against the input
of regional fishery management organizations that proceed not on the basis of
compelling public relations campaigns, but on the basis of compelling
scientific information.
It is the sort of thing that we’ve seen before, when advocacy
groups championed causes with public relations appeal, perhaps involving
charismatic megafauna—sharks, bluefin tuna, or broadbill swordfish in the
ocean, and elephants, lions, or grizzly bears on shore—while ignoring the
decline of species such as winter flounder, ocean pout, or bobwhite quail
because they aren’t big enough or photogenic enough catch the public imagination
and inspire public support.
In the same way, “30x30” can capture the public imagination
far better than technical measures intended to rebuild dusky shark populations,
even though the need for the latter is far better supported by data.
Which is just another reason whey fisheries management should
remain the realm of fisheries managers—people who have been trained, and have
dedicated their lifetimes, to conserving fish stocks and maintaining
sustainable fisheries—rather than a place where advocates, pushing their cause
of the day, merely roil the waters and keep the truly important work from being
done.