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but you are drastically mis-characterizing our efforts when you say we are "whinning [sic] about it and ratting out pirate fishing." ships like the Koyu Maru 3 are literally stealing fish from Pacific islanders. in many cases, the people from these Pacific island nations have lived off of these waters for thousands of years, and their way of life is threatened by the depletion of Pacific fisheries -- yet, unconscionably, pirate fishermen like these ones from Japan are brazenly flouting the law and all sense of moral decency just to make a buck.
empowering local Pacific islands governments to better police their waters -- it is a big ocean, after all, and very hard to patrol -- is therefore very good work, in my opinion. the Cook Islands gov't has been able to use our evidence to formally start legal proceedings against the ship and request that the Japanese gov't take action against the Koyu Maru 3. the end of this process, hopefully, will be that the vessel is called back to port in Japan for further investigation, meaning one less pirate fishing vessel on the seas. and each vessel can catch hundreds of tons of tuna at a time, and who knows how much more when they engage in trans-shipping. and that's saying nothing of the many other species being killed as bycatch. so it's really no small victory to take a pirate fishing vessel off the seas.
in the absence of this nebulous "innovation" you speak of, i think this is a damn fine way to try and stop pirate fishing. of course, we're also working on many other levels, politically speaking, to end the problem.
if your intent was really to start a discussion about ways to stop pirate fishing, maybe you could skip the whole casting aspersions bit and just get right on with the real conversation, in the future.