Revealed: New Zealand’s enormous 60-year, 25 million tonne illegal fishing lie
16
Maym 2016
Michael
Field, whose book The
Catch helped
expose the labour and human rights abuses in New Zealand’s fishing
industry, says a report out today reveals a decades-long abuse
of our much-vaunted quota system, with more than twice as many fish
caught as declared.
New
Zealanders know the power of national utterances; we live by “clean
and green” and “a great place to raise kids”.
Then
there is the one favoured by politicians: “New Zealand’s
world-leading fish quota scheme”. Like the others, it turned out to
be false.
An
academic report out today (media
release)
shows the quota system has failed – and may have even drifted into
the realm of the criminal. It reveals that the total amount of marine
fish caught in New Zealand waters between 1950 and 2010 is an
astounding 2.7 times more than that recorded by official statistics.
The
commercial fishing world has known this report was coming and feared
it, knowing it would suggest the emperor has left off some of his
robes. The recreational fishing world, as manifested in the
increasingly powerful Legasea lobby (think the fishing equivalent of
the NRA), is circling too, and last month had its own briefing on the
report.
The
report is part of a global Sea
Around Us project
published by the University of British Columbia’s Fisheries Centre.
Its leading writer is the University of Auckland Business School’s
Dr Glenn Simmons.
Simmons
– an ex-cop with a kind of monkish demeanor – and his colleagues,
including the dogged Professor Christina Stringer, have used the
Official Information Act to extract information from the Ministry of
Primary Industries (MPI). They knew that fishermen, the originators
of the “it was thisbig”
whopper, have an innate ability to lie.
Fishing
in New Zealand’s 4 million km2 exclusive economic zone rests on the
quota management system (QMS) which, with its profusion of
abbreviations and jargon, has all the clarity of a Latin High Mass.
Someone in MPI has had a bit of a joke over it; their undercover
operations include the Greek mythical names Achilles, Hippocamp and
Apate.
The
hidden cameras, phone taps and undercover agents have exposed the
world of inshore trawling in which one- to two-thirds of the catch on
every trip gets dumped over the side. Achilles in 2012 found that 20
to 100 percent of some quota species from every haul were thrown
overboard.
Those
regular but unexplained news reports of lots of dead fish strewn
across Coromandel, Piha andMuriwai beaches
now make sense.
At
the same time, lucrative fish like hapuka, moki, kahawai and kingfish
were kept but not reported, an explicit violation of the QMS.
Simmons
also found a case in which two rare Hector’s dolphins were caught
by a trawler but only one was reported.
EXTENDED
RECONSTRUCTED CATCH 1950-2013 (NEW ZEALAND AND FOREIGN FLAGGED
VESSELS), SHOWING REPORTED AND UNREPORTED CATCH. (SOURCE: SEA AROUND
US/INSTITUTE FOR THE OCEANS AND FISHERIES, UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH
COLUMBIA)
Sometimes
MPI observers actually saw the dumping but said nothing. Even if they
weren’t present, the reports show MPI knew all along but failed to
act.
That’s
bad enough, but the focus of the report is to work out what really
was taken out of New Zealand’s waters from 1950 to 2010. The
headline that will come out of the report is that over 61 years, 38.1
million tonnes of fish were taken. That number is 2.7 times, or 24.7
million tonnes, larger than what was officially reported by the
government.
Much
of the stuff was taken deliberately or, equally deliberately, caught
and thrown overboard. What it adds up to is a fishing industry
stealing the common wealth of New Zealanders.
The
scary part of it all is the seemingly calculated nature of the
misreporting. Simmons and team call them “invisible landings”,
where all the fish arrives ashore either not reported or
under-reported, or misidentified as another species, or simply as
part of a blatant black market operation.
In The
Catch I
argued that foreign-flagged fishing boats should
be kept out of our waters due to their appalling slave-like abuse of
their crews.
Researchers
Simmons and Stringer, who
also fought the slave fishing industry,
now show that the same vessels took nearly half of all New Zealand’s
catch.
Not
only did they use sweatshop cheap labour, they helped rob us.
The
bottom line is that the QMS needs to be tossed overboard. Time to try
again.
The problems might be overcome with technology but, as the
report says, the most serious obstacle to accurate reporting of
catches is the fact that misreporting has been profitable, and the
chances of being detected very small.
And
then there is the secrecy. Much can be seen as a fishing boat
unloads, but only the captain knows the paperwork.
Even
MPI observers are sworn to secrecy; this I found out when I spent
time on a Ukrainian Sealord trawler. The observer told me he felt
sorry for the worthless fish that went overboard: “The more
attention the politicians and the public give you, the more change
you can bring about. If I was trying to save some little ragged-tooth
guppies, no one would give much of a shit, even if they were
critically endangered. Sea lions are fluffy, big and impressive.”
He
was fired for saying that to me.
The
seafood industry are blessed these days with skillful PR; only
recently they circulated the joyful news that in the year to March
seafood exports had hit a record $1.7 billion.
The
problem we are left with is not the export accounting, but the
knowledge of what has been left behind: the dead fish, the
under-reported catches. Who knows whether any of it is sustainable?
Coincidentally,
the $1.7 billion figure is the same as what Legasea claims is the
contribution to New Zealand’s gross domestic product from
recreational fishing.
They say, hand on heart, a snapper caught by an
amateur fisherman is worth five times more to the economy than the
same fish taken by a Sanford boat.
What
intrigued me at the launching of that study at Snell’s Beach, north
of Auckland, was the large numbers of members of parliament who found
time on a Saturday afternoon to listen. The message they are getting,
and reinforced by this new report, is that a lot of voters take
fishing very seriously – and they’re angry about what the seafood
industry has been doing for decades.
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