There
is a parallel here with the IPCC reports being out of date.
In
a time of abrupt climate change and acidifying oceans using old data
is purely and simply lying.
Shame
on any government spewing out these lies, most ashamedly one with a
Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand coalition partner.
Signed
off by a bunch of liars.
---Kevin
Hester
Rosy
environment report card for NZ a greenwash, say marine experts
Forest
& Bird says the latest state of the environment report has
painted a deceptively rosy picture of the marine environment and used
old data to do it.
26
April, 2019
The
three-yearly report from the Ministry for the Environment and
Statistics New Zealand, titled Environment
Aotearoa 2019, was released last week and
painted a bleak picture of the environment, focusing on the nine most
pressing concerns.
One
of those concerns was the effect fishing was having on the marine
environment.
Forest
& Bird's marine conservation advocate Katrina Goddard said the
report had missed some alarming holes.
"I
think it's painted a very rose-tinted view of the marine threats and
it hasn't looked at the big picture and all of the threats. It's used
outdated statistics which was really disappointing to read."
The
report implied that bycatch had reduced and the fisheries were quite
healthy, which is not the case, she said.
According
to the report, commercial fishing had reduced in the last decade, and
97 percent of commercially-caught fish came from stocks considered to
be sustainably managed.
However,
it also said 16 percent of routinely assessed stocks were overfished
in 2017 and 10 stocks were considered collapsed. The report said
bycatch of protected species such as seabirds had reduced, but this
was based on data from before 2016.
Mrs
Goddard said those statistics said nothing meaningful about the
health of the ecosystem.
She
said this was not the latest data, with seabird capture having
increased 85 percent in some fisheries in the 2017/18 fishing year
compared to the previous year, including hoki, hake, ling and
warehou, according to data from the Department of Conservation.
"I
think what's disappointing is it makes a bold statement in the report
that bycatch is being reduced and that the number of threatened,
endangered and protected marine species caught has been reduced."
Mrs
Goddard said what she had gleaned from the most recent data was that
is not the case.
Independent
marine scientist Roger Grace said there were serious habitat-damaging
issues such as trawling and dredging, which the report touches on,
but not in great detail, so they aren't addressed effectively.
"For
the last 30 to 50 years we've been hammering the shallow and inshore
habitats and smashing the natural life there to bits, and it's no
longer as good for juvenile fish habitat," he said.
The
Ministry for the Environment and Statistics New Zealand said the
report was an overarching picture, and not designed to drill down to
the detail of each domain.
The
marine data used in the report came from a 2016 in depth report
specifically looking at the ocean environment, and that given the
breadth of the report it was not practical to update all of the
information.
The
agencies also said they simply did not have the scope to look more in
depth at other problems in the marine environment, and the report had
provided an accurate description of the key issues.
The
next Marine domain report is due in October, and the departments said
it would include updated information.
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