Bycatch,
defined in the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act as
“fish which are harvested in a fishery,
but which are not sold or kept for personal use, and includes economic discards
and regulatory discards,”
has long been a problem in commercial
and a handful of recreational fisheries.
Although one of the National
Standards for Fishery Conservation and Management created by Magnuson-Stevens
states that
“Conservation and management measures
shall, to the extent practicable, (A) minimize bycatch and (B) to the extent
that bycatch cannot be avoided, minimize the mortality of such bycatch,”
meaningful efforts to reduce bycatch
have been few and far between; efforts to do so are generally stymied by the
lobbying efforts of industrial-scale fishing industries, which wield significant
political influence.
For the most part, the bycatch
debate has flown under the radar of the popular press; it is an issue largely
championed by conservation groups and by smaller-scale fishermen who feel
victimized by an industrial fleet that is permitted to incidentally kill species
of fish now denied, in whole or in part, to fishermen who once directly
targeted them and depend on them for their livelihoods.
However, that may be changing.Last
month, the United States Government
Accountability Office, which was created to be
“an independent, non-partisan agency that
works for Congress [and] examines how taxpayer dollars are spent and provides
Congress and federal agencies with objective, non-partisan, fact-based
information to help the government save money and work more efficiently,”
The GAO found that
“[The National Marine Fisheries Service’s]
efforts to track its performance in reducing and monitoring bycatch do not
align with key elements of evidence-based policymaking related to performance
management. Specifically, the agency’s
bycatch reduction implementation plan lacks measurable performance goals. Having an updated plan with measurable goals
and a tracking process could help inform agency decision-making.
“Additionally, NMFS has enhanced its database
to compile bycatch estimates but does not have a comprehensive written plan for
how it will report the estimates.
Developing such a plan could help the agency better monitor bycatch
levels, trends, and information gaps, and demonstrate progress over time to
internal and external stakeholders.”
To develop the report, the GAO
focused on five specific fisheries, selected to include a diversity of fishing
areas and fishing gear. Those fisheries
were the Bering Sea pollock trawl fishery, the Gulf of Mexico shrimp trawl
fishery, the Hawaii deep-set tuna longline fishery, the New England scallop
dredge fishery, and the West Coast groundfish fixed-gear fishery. No fisheries within the Mid-Atlantic, South
Atlantic, or Caribbean regions were examined.
In compiling the report, the GAO
noted that bycatch, and bycatch reduction measures, were very specific to a
fishery and to the species sought, as well as to the composition of the bycatch
that the measures seek to reduce. Overall,
modifications to fishing gear, which allow fishermen to continue to operate
while reducing encounters with bycatch species, are preferred over measures
that close fishing areas either permanently or for defined periods of time, and
so seriously impair fishing operations.
Similarly, the GAO found that measures developed independently of the
fishing community, which have or are perceived to have a significant impact on
the harvest of target species, will be less acceptable to fishermen, who may
not comply with gear modification requirements.
Another issue is the availability
of observers, who NMFS considers “essential” if the bycatch issue is to be
properly addressed. Such observers
confirm the existence and level of bycatch caught in existing gear, and can
monitor the effectiveness of bycatch reduction efforts. However, observer levels vary from fishery to
fishery, and coverage can be anywhere between 0% to 100% of trips made. The level of funding can depend on a number
of factors, including the availability of federal or industry funding, whether
protected (i.e. Endangered Species Act-listed or protected under the Marine
Mammals Act) species are involved, and the size and geographic scope of the
fishery.
The low level of observers
present in many fisheries (out of the five fisheries examined by the GAO, there
was 100% coverage in the Bering Sea pollock trawl fishery, while coverage in
the other four ranged between 2 and 41 percent) can lead to significant
uncertainty in the bycatch data.
After speaking with NMFS
administrators, scientists, members of regional fishery management councils,
and stakeholders, the GAO included four recommendations in its report. It advised that
“The Assistant Administrator for NMFS
should gather information from across the regions to identify any additional
resources needed to support fisheries observers, and communicate these needs to
relevant stakeholders, including Congress.
(Recommendation 1)
“The Assistant Administrator for NMFS
should develop an updated National Bycatch Reduction Strategy Implementation Plan
with measurable performance goals tied to specific time frames. (Recommendation 2)
“The Assistant Administrator for NMFS
should develop a process for tracking progress toward the performance goals in
the National Bycatch Reduction Strategy Implementation Plan and use the
information to guide agency decision-making.
(Recommendation 3)
“The Assistant Administrator for NMFS
should develop a comprehensive written plan for reporting on bycatch estimates
from the enhanced Fisheries One Stop Shop database, including how the agency
will communicate over time on bycatch levels, trends, and information
gaps. (Recommendation 4)”
So do we have reason to believe
that progress will soon be made on the bycatch issue?
Probably not. Politics will get in the way.
First, we should note that the
report was addressed to, and requested by,
“the Ranking Member Committee on Natural
Resources, House of Representatives,”
Raul M. Grijalva.
The Ranking Member of a House
committee is the highest-ranking member of the minority party
sitting on such committee. Given the
high degree of partisanship in the House, along with the majority party’s general
hostility to any legislation that promotes conservation and/or might place any
restrictions on business, the likelihood of the report giving birth to changes in
federal fisheries law is remote, at best, in 2024; future success would depend
on a change in the party controlling the House, with no such change taking
place in the Senate or, probably, in the White House.
Given the current state of
electoral politics, that’s not the most likely outcome of the November
elections.
“The State of Washington (WA) nominees by
Governor Jay Inslee to both the North Pacific and Pacific Councils are strong advocates of management policies that prioritize
ecosystem protections over ‘optimum yields’ from fisheries extractions, as
currently defined in fisheries laws.
“Many fishery stakeholders have long
believed that the North Pacific Fishery Management Council (“NPFMC”) ‘family’
has become too top-heavy with large trawl interests who are vested directly or
indirectly in the Bering Sea pollock and groundfish fisheries.
“WA holds two of eleven voting seats on
the 15-member NPFMC, and both are up for grabs.
“How the Council votes directly impact the
Seattle trawl companies’ bottom lines and Inslee’s ‘eco-candidate’ choices for
the NPFMC, have prompted a full-court press by powerful Senate trawl lobbyists
to sway opinions at US Commerce in Washington, DC…
“Governor Inslee’s choice of one seat on
the Pacific Fishery Management Council (“PFMC”) has also raised the hackles of
Seattle’s trawl sector…”
Having observed fisheries issues
for many years, I suspect that the lobbyists may still prevail, and that the
trawlers will get one—or more—of their own on the two regional fishery
management councils, which will make effective bycatch reduction that much more
difficult to achieve.
Still, it is good to see the
issue get some attention.
Although, as we go into an
election that will probably put an administration that was demonstrably hostile
to fisheries conservation back in power, a little attention and no results may
be all that we get for the next four—or more—years.
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