World's first illegal fishing treaty now in force
A groundbreaking
international accord aimed at stamping out illegal fishing went into
effect today and is now legally binding for the 29 countries and a
regional organization that have adhered to it.
The Agreement on Port State Measures to
Prevent, Deter and Eliminate Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated
Fishing (PSMA) - adopted as an FAO Agreement in 2009 after a
years-long diplomatic effort - is the first ever binding
international treaty that focuses specifically on illicit fishing.
The threshold to activation of the
treaty- official adherence by at least 25 countries - was surpassed
last month, triggering a 30-day countdown to today's
entry-into-force.
"This is a great day in the
continuing effort to build sustainable fisheries that can help feed
the world," said FAO Director-General Graziano da Silva. "We
hail those countries that have already signed on to the agreement and
who will begin implementing it as of today. We invite governments who
have yet to do so, to join the collective push to stamp out illegal
fishing and safeguard the future of our ocean resources."
Currently, the parties to the PSMA are:
Australia, Barbados, Chile, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, the European
Union (as a member organization), Gabon, Guinea, Guyana, Iceland,
Mauritius, Mozambique, Myanmar, New Zealand, Norway, Oman, Palau,
Republic of Korea, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Seychelles, Somalia, South
Africa, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Thailand, Tonga, the United States of
America, Uruguay, and Vanuatu.
The Organization has been informed that
additional formal instruments of acceptance of the Agreement should
be received shortly.
Hardening ports against pirate fishers

Parties to the Agreement are obliged to
implement a number of measures while managing ports under their
control, with the goals of detecting illegal fishing, stopping
ill-caught fish from being offloaded and sold, and ensuring
information on unscrupulous vessels is shared globally.
These include requiring foreign fishing
vessels wishing to enter ports to request permission in advance,
transmitting detailed information on their identities, activities,
and the fish they have onboard. Landings can only happen at specially
designated ports equipped for effective inspections.
Ships suspected of being involved in
illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing can be denied entry
into port outright - or permitted to enter for inspection purposes
only and refused permission to offload fish, refuel, or resupply.
Vessels that are allowed into ports may
be subject to inspections conducted according to a common set of
standards. They will be required to prove that they are licensed to
fish by the country whose flag they fly, and that they have the
necessary permissions from the countries in whose waters they
operate. If not, or if inspections turn up evidence of IUU fishing
activity, vessels will be denied any further use of ports and
reported as violators.
Once a ship is denied access or
inspections reveal problems, parties must communicate that
information to the country under whose flag the vessel is registered
and inform other treaty participants as well as portmasters in
neighboring countries. (Full text of the treaty.)
A first of its kind
Operating without proper authorization,
catching protected species, using outlawed types of gear or
disregarding catch quotas are among the most common IUU fishing
activities.
Such practices undermine efforts to
responsibly manage marine fisheries, damaging their productivity and
in some cases precipitating their collapse
While there are options for combating
IUU fishing at sea, they are often expensive and -especially for
developing countries - can be difficult to implement, given the large
ocean spaces that need to be monitored and the costs of the required
technology.
Accordingly, port state measures are
one of the most efficient - and cost effective - ways to fight IUU
fishing.
The now-active Port State Measures
agreement provides the international community with valuable tool for
achieving the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, which includes a
stand-alone goal on the conservation of and sustainable use of oceans
and a specific sub-target on IUU fishing.
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