Dear [ supporter ]
Minister
Sets New Catch Limits
option4 gives the Minister a brickbat and two bouquets. The Minister
of Fisheries, Pete Hodgson, has made his decisions on several important
inshore, shared fisheries for the fishing year commencing 1/10/02.
Brickbat
- Snapper 2 (SNA2 - East Cape to Wellington)
option4 is really surprised that the Minister has taken the major
step of setting a Total Allowable Catch (which includes commercial,
public, Maori customary and all other forms of mortality associated
with fishing) of 450 tonnes for SNA2 and at the same time has increased
the Total Allowable Commercial Catch (TACC) from 252 tonnes to 315
tonnes. After taking account of the uncertainty surrounding the
recreational harvest he has made an allowance of 90 tonnes for the
public, despite the Ministry's initial advice that he should allow
only 40 tonnes.
Previously there
was no TAC set in this fishery and the fishery was mainly managed
by adjusting the TACC and, to a lesser extent, by making alterations
to recreational bag limits, size limits and method constraints.
This meant that if the catch rates were good and the commercial
catch profile was stable or improving the TACC could be increased
or conversely reduced if the fishery showed signs of stress. Recreational
and Maori customary catches were not needed to be known with a high
level of certainty because the overall fishery indicators would
give fisheries managers an idea of the health of the fishery - there
was no need to determine the explicit tonnages taken by non commercial
users. Non-commercial harvest was thought to be around 40 tonnes
per year although it was irrelevant whether or not this estimate
was accurate.
The Fisheries
Act 1996 which came into force last year states that where a TACC
is varied then a TAC must be set for that fishery and this meant
that for the Ministry's proposed increase to the TACC to happen
then a TAC for SNA2 must be set at the same time. The Fisheries
Act considers the TAC to be the absolute constraint on total removals
from the fishery and the Minister is obliged to manage the fishery
within that overall catch level. This means that to set a meaningful
TAC the Minister must have all the information on all the extractions
from the fishery - as accurate as possible. This is where we believe
the Minister has been misled - we believe the Ministry has seriously
underestimated the non-commercial catch in SNA2 and that the TAC
could be seriously over caught because of this.
There is a huge
degree of uncertainty about what the recreational catch actually
is in SNA2. The Ministry contended that an estimate of recreational
catch of 40 tonnes was appropriate - new research indicates the
recreational catch may be as high as 700 tonnes in this fishery.
option4 submitted that the recreational harvest was at least 355
tonnes. To set a TAC without ensuring that the allowances bear some
relationship to reality surely must undermine the concept of the
Quota Management System. What will happen if the Minister has set
the recreational catch incorrectly and the true recreational catch
is 300 or 400 tonnes. His duty is clear, he must constrain the total
removals to the TAC. Next year, will we be looking at having our
bag limits slashed by 75% or more to constrain our catches within
this new TAC or will the Minister simply raise the TAC to accommodate
our actual catch? Either way, it actually looks like the Minister
has set the TAC in an expedient manner, merely to accommodate an
increase to the TACC with little or no regard to whether the TAC
has been set realistically.
What was the
rush? Why such urgency? The Minister says that the new ACE quota
balancing looks like working in this fishery. Finally, the historical
massive commercial overcatch of SNA2 TACC looked like being resolved.
The uncertainty regards the non-commercial catch should have absolutely
precluded him from increasing any catch limits in this fishery until
next year when all the information will be available. To give the
fishing industry extra quota is easy - to take it away with what
appears to be a reallocation of catch between sectors is the tough
call. Lets be really clear, the recreational catch is what it is
- not an increase as some would have us believe, but simply a more
accurate estimation. We must never forget how hard we were hit when
the fish down of this fishery occurred in the 1970's. The fishing
opportunities denied, the reduction in catch per trip and the snapper
that we have not been able to catch whilst the fishery has been
allowed to rebuild for some 15 to 20 years. Just because there are
no records of our catch back then, this does not mean that up to
date estimations automatically get described as an increase -they
are just a more accurate representation of our catch. The Ministers
decision https://option4.co.nz/finaldecisionsna2.htm
and the Ministries Final Advice Paper https://option4.co.nz/fapsna2.htm
are worth reading
Bouquet #1
- Terakihi 1
(TAR1 North Cape to both East Cape and Cape Egmont - East and West
coasts)
The Minister has refused an Adaptive Management Proposal, which
would have seen commercial quotas increased by 43%. The Minister's
refusal is because of the uncertainty of how an increase of this
magnitude may adversely affect recreational fishers in this important
recreational fishery. A breath of fresh air and a bouquet!
Bouquet #
2 - Paua Fisheries - South Island
Several of the South Island stocks have been declining because of
commercial overcatch. The Minister's decision sees quotas reduced
to levels that will allow these depleted stocks to start rebuilding.
Thank you Minister.
To read the
Minister's decisions and the Final Advice Paper from his Ministry,
please go to https://option4.co.nz/fishman.htm
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