IEyeNews

iLocal News Archives

Caribbean edges closer to adopting fisheries policy

Local village fisherman work to catch enough fish to make a living to sell to the local market in the village of Katumbi on Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania. The Nature Conservancy is launching a large-scale effort in the Greater Mahale Ecosystem, with PathfinFrom Guyana Times

The Belize-based Caribbean Regional Fisheries Mechanism (CRFM) says the region is closer to adopting a fisheries policy

The Belize-based Caribbean Regional Fisheries Mechanism (CRFM) says the region is closer to adopting a fisheries policy which it describes as a progressive agreement for the cooperative management of shared fisheries resources in the Caribbean.

It said advocacy, awareness-building strategy and effective use of in-country mechanisms to facilitate adoption of the Caribbean Community Common Fisheries Policy (CCCFP) by the Caricom leaders were the main agreements emanating from a three-day meeting in Dominica last week.

“The policy is a progressive agreement for the cooperative management of shared fisheries resources in the region and many of the principles, goals and objectives of the CCCFP are already integrated into the activities of the CRFM whose mandate includes concentrating on efforts to develop related protocols to harmonise various systems critical to a regional approach to fisheries management systems,” the CRFM said in a statement.

CRFM Executive Director Milton Haughton said the recent meeting was of particular historical significance to the region, noting that the first sub-regional Fisheries Management Plan (FMP) to facilitate cooperation in the conservation, management and sustainable use of the flying fish resources shared among countries in the Eastern Caribbean was endorsed by the forum.

“This action paves the way for a new era of fisheries management in the region,” he said, “one that engages stakeholders in the management decision-making process and utilises a holistic approach that considers human well-being, ecosystem and governance issues.”

Presentation

He said the FMP will be presented to the Ministerial Council for endorsement at its next meeting scheduled for May 23 and formalised through signature of an accompanying resolution by the Flying fish Ministerial Sub-Committee.

Other concerns discussed at the meeting include the impacts of climate change and illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing as well as initiatives to improve fisheries monitoring, control and surveillance and to foster regional cooperation in the management the region’s flying fish, lobster and queen conch fisheries resources and related ecosystems.

The forum reviewed a draft declaration on the conservation, management and sustainable use of the Spiny Lobster, which is to be updated with recent scientific information and inputs from stakeholder consultations by member states through the CRFM Fisheries Working Group before submission to the Ministerial Council for approval.

A similar declaration for harmonisation of regional management strategies for the Queen Conch is to be prepared, based on the outputs of an EU-funded Project under the ACP Fish II Programme to improve and harmonise the scientific approaches required to inform sustainable management of the species in the region, the CRFM statement added. (CMC)

For more on this story go to: http://www.guyanatimesgy.com/?p=61013&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=caribbean-edges-closer-to-adopting-fisheries-policy

 

LEAVE A RESPONSE

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *