I
have been waiting for confirmation of this news before posting.
The
reports will emphasize the role of the major fishing nations but
ignore the key role of the New Zealand government and fishing
industry in scuppering any agreement. It was New Zealand which first
developed the Antarctic toothfish fishery in the first place – and
therefore has no interest in protecting the
last pristine area left on the planet – the Ross Sea.
Please
listen to the excellent interview with one of the foremost scientists
and experts on the area – from Radio New Zealand yesterday
Ross
Sea talks fail, nations to meet again next year
Major
nations have failed to reach an agreement on whether the world's
largest marine reserve should be set up in the Southern Ocean.
TVNZ,
2
November, 2012
Representatives
from the 25-nation Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic
Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) have been meeting in Hobart, to
create a plan to protect whales and penguins in Antarctica's Ross
Sea.
However,
it is believed that Korea, China, Japan and Russia blocked the
advancement of the proposal for the protection plan at a meeting last
night.
Instead,
the group has agreed to hold a special session in Germany in July
2013 to try and break the deadlock.
New
Zealand and the United States have already agreed to advance a joint
proposal for a 2.27 million square kilometre marine reserve in the
Ross Sea. This proposal would allow "light" fishing in
certain areas.
Green
MP Gareth Hughes said if the CCAMLR nations failed to reach an
agreement by next year, it could set the negotiation process back by
ten years or more.
"New
Zealand has been planning towards a proposal for a Marine Protected
Area in the Ross Sea since 2009 and had successfully negotiated a
joint proposal with the US," he said.
"Rather
than leaving it up to officials, Foreign Minister Murray McCully
needs to get involved in talks with other foreign ministers to push
for a positive outcome."
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