GENERAL SANTOS CITY, Philippines -– The two-year ban on purse seine tuna fishing in the Pacific Ocean has been extended for another three months or until March, an industry leader here said.
Marfenio Tan, director of the Socsksargen Federation of Fishing and Allied Industries Inc. (SFFAII), said the 8th regular session of the Commission for the Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean or WCPFC8 was moved to March 26-30 in Guam from its December 5-9, 2011 schedule in Koror, Palau.
He said the postponement of the meeting put off for another three months any action on the purse seine fishing ban in pockets of the Pacific Ocean -- a restriction that has slowed down the tuna fishing industry here in the last two years.
“The WCPFC will convene on the last week of March in Guam and part of the discussions will center on whether the fishing ban will be extended or (purse seine fishing in the Pacific) will be totally banned,” Tan said.
A treaty-based organization that leads the conservation and management of fish stocks in the Pacific Ocean, the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission imposed a two-year fishing ban starting on January 1, 2010 in two pockets of the high seas in the western and eastern areas to replenish the dwindling stocks of the highly migratory tuna species.
Pocket one covers Palau, Micronesia, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, which are the areas closest to the Philippines and where local purse seine tuna fishing companies operate.
In a December 22, 2011 official notice to its members, cooperating non-members and participating territories, Prof. Glenn Hurry, the WCPFC executive director, said the WCPFC8 meeting will take place on March 26-30 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Guam with logistical and administrative support from the US and Guam officials.
The notice did not cite the reasons for the postponement of the meeting but a report posted last week at the global tuna resource website
www.atuna.com said WCPFC8 “has been shifted to Guam after a fire in November at Palau’s main power plant.”
The incident, which forced electricity rationing in Palau’s capital of Koror, reportedly prompted the commission to move the meeting to Guam in March.
The Philippines earlier constituted a team composed of fishing industry leaders and officials from the Departments of Agriculture, Foreign Affairs, and Trade and Industry, as well as from the Mindanao Development Authority to push for the lifting of the fishing ban.
The team was tasked to present the country’s position in the discussions on the stock status of key tuna species and evaluation of the WCPFC’s Conservation and Management Measure (CMM) 2008-01, which provided for the two-year fishing ban.
The Tuna Canners Association of the Philippines earlier said production dropped by 20 percent in the first three quarters of 2011 as a result of the fishing ban.
Dubbed the “Tuna Capital of the Philippines," General Santos City hosts six of the country’s seven tuna canneries.