A New Approach to Overfishing

Overfishing threatens food security for a billion people worldwide, job security for millions tied to the fishing industry and coastal economies, and the sustainability of many complex marine ecosystems. Modern technologies have spread industrial fishing to the furthest corners of the world, while human populations have exploded, bringing soaring appetites. We have only recently begun to understand the extent to which these dynamics are leading to the depletion of many fish species, and an extensive policy debate is now being waged regarding what to do about it. Overfishing is expected to get worse in the foreseeable future, complicated by new global pressures from climate change. Society must learn to manage marine resources in a more sustainable way in order to meet the demands of a growing population.

In the United States, federally managed commercial and recreational marine fisheries, such as those for Pacific salmon or red grouper in the Gulf of Mexico, are located in a giant “ring” around the country roughly three to 200 nautical miles offshore. This is known as the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). It is the largest of any nation, and it contains some of the best managed fisheries in the world. As a commercial salmon fisherman in Alaska’s Cook Inlet in 2003 and 2005 and a crab fisherman in the Bering Sea in 2008, I saw firsthand how well our North Pacific fisheries are managed. However, there are still many challenges. We now have the technology and scientific data to understand the impact of hundreds of years of large-scale commercial fishing. The ocean is not as inexhaustible as we once thought.

Commercial Fishing

There are currently 37 federal fish populations classified as overfished according to the National Marine Fisheries Service. The populations of iconic species that built early American industries and sustained generations of fishermen, such as Atlantic cod caught off New England, have crashed to historic lows. Yet, the economics of “Big Fish” complicate sustainable management. In the United States, the commercial and recreational fishing industries support $200 billion in annual sales and almost two million jobs. Many coastal communities depend upon a reliable source of fish not only to support the fishing community but also the food service, retail, transportation, and tourism industries. This makes efforts by federal managers to restrict access and rebuild depleted fisheries difficult.

Uncertainties in some U.S. fisheries are now resulting in a legislative fight. At the forefront is the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MSA), the law that governs all U.S. federal fisheries. The MSA was first passed in 1976 to curb overfishing by foreign fleets near the U.S. coastline, which included the overfishing of crab by Russian vessels in Alaska’s Bering Sea. The law extended the U.S. EEZ to where it presently stands and established a system of management that relies on input from eight regional fishery management councils. After 1976, however, we replaced overfishing by foreign fleets on many of our important species with domestic overfishing. The MSA was reauthorized in 1996 and 2006 to include additional ocean fish conservation measures in order to address domestic overfishing. These measures established scientific rebuilding timelines for depleted fish species and annual catch limits (ACLs) for many important fish. While there are still 37 overfished populations today, there has been an equal number of depleted populations rebuilt to sustainable levels under the MSA since 2000.

The last reauthorization of the MSA was a bipartisan effort signed into law by President George W. Bush. The MSA is again up for reauthorization, but the necessary climate needed to ensure we continue to end overfishing and rebuild fish populations to sustainable levels appears to be more difficult to realize this time around. Political landmines exist in many coastal districts. Some commercial and recreational fishermen, upset with federal managers for closing or restricting access to certain fisheries, have become very vocal. In 2013, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley sued the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) when the agency drastically cut the amount of cod that fishermen could take that year, citing an “indifference to the plight of Massachusetts fishing families.”As a former commercial fisherman, I understand how even a slight reduction in the length of a fishing season, or a reduction in the total allowable catch for a species, can have significant impacts on the livelihoods of everyone associated with the fishing industry. However, scientists, conservationists, and federal managers warn that we must not prioritize short-term economic gain over the long-term stability of our fisheries and ocean ecosystems.

Some state legislators have also recently pushed initiatives that would extend state waters miles beyond their current boundaries and that would take state control of certain federally managed species. These initiatives are attacks on the whole federal management system by those who mistrust it, are dissatisfied with restrictions placed upon them, and feel that the state can better manage resources. Mistrust of federal management, in part, led the House of Representatives to pass a MSA reauthorization proposal earlier this year that sought to gut rebuilding timelines for depleted fisheries, create exemptions from setting annual catch limits, and weaken the environmental review process of fishery management decisions made by federal managers.  The proposal received an early veto threat by the Obama administration and was a “stinging disappointment” to conservationists. It remains to be seen what action will be taken by the Senate but it is clear there is a long way to go in securing sustainable fishing policy in the United States.

While it might be easy to dismiss political infighting on fisheries issues as just another example of electioneering, this is not a uniquely American story. Countries around the world, particularly in the developing world, face similar or greater threats to their domestic fisheries. In countries with little economic stability or law enforcement capability, sustainable fishing policies are non-existent. Not only does overfishing by domestic fleets run rampant in these countries but, desperate to find sources of revenue, they also sell access to fisheries within their EEZs. Foreign industrial ships are often allowed to take without limit, which devastates local industry. With little fish left at home, local fishermen turn to piracy in international waters where there is little oversight. This has led to a current crisis where it is estimated that 108,000 pounds of fish are taken illegally from the world’s oceans every minute. This “pirate fishing” occurs at such a pervasive rate that it has become a multi-billion dollar industry and has evolved into one of the top threats to the sustainability of the world’s fisheries.

Overfishing at home and abroad combined with environmental stressors from climate change, ocean acidification, and pollution run-off is leading our oceans to disaster. As fish stocks decline in many areas, so do larger mammals, sea birds, and other critical components of the marine food web. Industrial fishing doesn’t need to stop, but it needs to be improved. Ending destructive fishing practices such as bottom trawling, which destroys habitat in the same way that clear cutting a rainforest might, and increasing law enforcement capacity in international waters are some initial and necessary steps. We must also overhaul how we manage marine resources and think differently about our impacts on the sea. Recent technological advancements and improved scientific understanding of ocean ecosystems, combined with decades of monitoring data, have led many to conclude that a new approach is needed for fishery management in order to meet the needs of the 21st century. Fortunately, the U.S. is poised to lead on this front.

As the re-authorization of the Magnuson-Stevens Act works its way through congress, the news isn’t all bad. There is a proposal for updating the law that would manage our country’s marine resources in a better way, called, “Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management.” This new approach is built upon a few key concepts, which include taking into consideration the waste created from bycatch (when other types of wildlife are killed and discarded while fishing for a certain species), the effect of habitat destruction on an ecosystem, and the conservation of smaller “forage fish” which feed larger predators. While much of this might seem like common sense, this proposal is different than the current system of management – which primarily focuses on a single species at a time rather than taking a look at the entire ecosystem.

An ecosystem-based approach would also create mechanisms to take the impacts of climate change into consideration when making fishery management decisions. For example, we now have the tools to understand the link between climate change, rising ocean temperatures, shifting fish migration patterns, and how that affects a particular fishery. By adopting this new approach to fishery management, the U.S. will be an example to countries around the world for sustaining vibrant fisheries in the face of growing population demands and environmental stressors.

We are at a critical juncture in marine resource management. The stakes are high for policymakers to get this right before a tipping point is reached in our fragile ocean ecosystems – the life support system of our civilization. The debate must not fall victim to those who would prioritize short-term economic gain, or personal political gain, over long term sustainability. Watch the re-authorization of the Magnuson-Stevens Act closely, as it provides a valuable window into which direction the U.S., and, by example, the world, decides to take.

 

 

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Will Hackman is third-year, part-time MPP student specializing in energy, environmental, and climate change policy. Will founded a graduate student organization at McCourt dedicated to developing energy, environmental, and climate change policy solutions (McCourt E&E), he served as the 2016-2017 graduate student representative to the Steering Committee of the Georgetown Environment Initiative, as a Research Assistant to the Georgetown Climate Center, directed the Young Professionals Board of the Sustainable Oceans Alliance, represented Georgetown at multiple United Nations climate change conferences overseas, and is a contributing author on energy, environmental, and climate change topics for a variety of campus publications including the Georgetown Public Policy Review and SFS’s Journal of International Affairs. This academic year, Will has been selected to serve as a Student Leader to the McDonough School of Business’s Global Social Enterprise Initiative.

7 thoughts on “A New Approach to Overfishing

  1. While I share the laudatory goals of EBFM, we ought not dismiss the hardcore realities of our abilities, or lack thereof, to achieve such aspirations. I would submit that the science of today is struggling at best to keep up with the demands of the current MSA which is single species focused. Frequency of assessments, for example, with a few exceptions is largely wholly inadequate to properly manage most species. Assuming that there is even any assessment available for the species in question. And there remains the ever present resource lack to perform these assessments. Not only people, but the funds to carry out the complex work needed are in scarce supply and not likely to be available in the foreseeable future. Add in the multiple complexities of the ecosystem impacts and we add orders of magnitude more difficulty to the process and science needs. Is society willing to incur the costs needed to get to an adequate EBFM plateau?

    The goal is a wonderful vision, but should be regarded as just that. Incremental steps to get closer to the vision are being taken and will be taken, but we are decades away from approaching a reasonable realization. We’re like the Little Leaguer with aspirations to be a major leaguer. Perhaps, but there is a long road between here and there.

    1. Agreed. I have spent weeks in formal training with NMFS staff on how the assessments are conducted. In any other field, their information is so poor that it would be regarded as “not statistically significant” – ie the margins of error are anywhere from 20% up to even 50%. With data that poor, no statistician would advise you to simply “adjust for the greatest margin of error”, which is what NMFS does. Instead, they would advise you to make no assumptions based on the data whatsoever due to its extreme inadequacy. When you press NMFS staff on these points the response, in a semi-unfair paraphrasing, is, “Hey, our job is really, really hard. Cut us a break!” I’m fine with the science not being there yet as long as we aren’t playing games with millions of American jobs based on the statistically insignificant “findings.”

  2. The author certainly knows how to build false consensus. The current system works for commercial fishermen, for the most part, so he doesn’t want to see it changed – all while presenting the self-sacrificing message of conservation. In reality, recreational fishermen drive conservation in American’s oceans through license sales, excise taxes, and private donations to the tuned of $1.5 billion (not to mention the volunteerism encapsulated in the average American angler). Commercial fisherman are a fraction of a fraction of this force for conservation, yet the author attempts to co-opt the message for the good of his “former” industry – all the while ignoring the true victims of the current management system: America’s 11 million saltwater anglers.

    Overall, just a very disingenuous piece. I’m disappointed that Georgetown allowed it to be published.

  3. If an ecosystem based process is developed in accordance with possible impacts related to climate change and reveals that some species will thrive and increase in abundance and their range, would you support increased quota and harvest of those species?

    Greg DiDomenico
    Garden State Seafood Association

  4. I want to make clear that the views expressed in this article, as well as my comments, are my own and do not represent any single industry or organization. I wrote this article as someone personally concerned about the future sustainability of marine fish both at home and abroad. The piece is structured as a brief, evidenced-based, introduction to marine fisheries management for those who know little about the topic and who may form their own conclusions based on the many citations I provide for further reading. Since this journal encourages proposals for policy their authors think would be the best course of action for solving a particular problem, that is what I provided.

    Robert and Austin, it sounds like we all want the same thing: healthy fisheries that sustain vibrant industries for future generations. My main point of this piece is to highlight some of the major challenges we face in the 21st century and the need to “update” federal management so that our fisheries are resilient. Some of these proposals might be aspirational but that’s not to say they shouldn’t be pursued. In fact, some regional councils are already pursuing components of EBFM including Fishery Ecosystem Plans (FEPs) and forage fish protections.

    Rising ocean temperatures that are shifting fish migration patterns, acidification and pollution run-off that kills habitat which marine life depends on, the decline of forage fish in many areas and issues associated with the larger fish that rely upon them, bycatch, are all real issues that we need our system of management to be able to deal with in the long term. It will take all of our collective expertise to meet these challenges. No one wants to see fishermen go out of business or saltwater anglers prohibited from fishing for a certain species. I love to fish and being out on the water. I want everyone to be able to experience that thrill, as long as we can do so in a sustainable way. To ensure fisheries are sustainable is why I am trying to highlight why the current system might not go far enough.

    Management decisions are made using the best available science. Even with all the hard work done by the councils and NMFS, building American fisheries into some of the best managed in the world (overall), there are still many regional concerns with overfishing and depleted stocks. Many believe these concerns will be aggravated by environmental stressors and the other factors I’ve described. Let’s work to improve the system for a new generation, setting it up for resilience and long-term security, and not undercut the progress that’s been made.

    1. Will,
      Thank you for your reply. I agree about 90% with your statements above. Perhaps you have unintentionally written bias into your article as opposed to blatantly presenting a biased viewpoint. My primary point of contention is with your subtle rejection of the five-state solution for Red Snapper Management. In reality, this is a plan that has previous precedent (see black sea bass in the NE) and makes sense from both an economic and a conservation perspective. It seems like all of us commenting here have a great deal of familiarity with the politics of fish, but I feel extremely confident that none of us can point to fish stocks that have been mismanaged by state DNRs. They are simply the best entities to do the job – at least in the case of Gulf red snapper.

      To your comments about forage fish – I wholeheartedly agree. However, I would challenge you to ask yourself who is catching the forage fish? It’s certainly not recreational anglers.

      If we want better conservation, we must have more recreational anglers on the water. That’s because the majority of funding for aquatic conservation comes from excise taxes (and private donations) on recreational anglers: license sales, boat taxes, tackle taxes, etc. No one, myself included, wants to see commercial fishermen off the water, but if we want to see effective conservation in our oceans, recreational anglers must be given a fair shake. Your article contradicts this point, which is the reason I questioned the authenticity of your dedication to conservation – this seems to have been premature, and for that I apologize. However, I would still recommend that you do more research on conservation funding. In order to address your concerns mentioned above (climate change, water quality, etc) we must have funding from more rec anglers out on the water using our public resources. This is the “American System of Conservation Funding,” and it drives our government’s “user pays, public benefits” system of conservation for our public resources. At the end of the day, one user group is paying for conservation, volunteering for habitat restoration projects, and supporting outside conservation groups, while another group is killing our forage fish, creating bycatch, and trying to drive out the funders of conservation for personal profit. Again, I want to reiterate that I don’t want commercial fishermen off the water, but I’m trying to explain my adverse reaction to commercial fishermen being associated with conservation as opposed to recreational anglers.

      My argument above only address the conservation value of rec anglers. It doesn’t touch on the higher economic value per fish or the cultural implications for coastal communities. I would be happy to discuss these with you if you are interested.

      Thank you,
      Austin

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