Category: Defending the Pacific

What sort of fisheries manager are you?

Posted by jhocevar on 12/11/2008 9:07 pm

As the delegates at the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission meeting in Korea negotiate tuna into extinction, our oceans team over there has been asking them to fill out this survey:

 

WHAT SORT OF FISHERIES MANAGER ARE YOU?

 

Your scientists tell you to end overfishing by reducing effort by 30%. Do you:
a) thank your scientists and reduce fishing effort by 30%
b) say “nya-nya-nya, I can’t hear you” and continue fishing at current levels
c) pretend you’re being responsible while in fact negotiating another year of 20% overfishing

 

You watch another fisheries commission fail miserably to save their stock from collapse and instead head towards commercial extinction. Do you:
a) learn from their mistakes and end overfishing immediately
b) follow them blindly in ignoring their scientists
c) imagine that you are different, your oceans are different and somehow you can continue overfishing without the same thing happening here

 

You discover that part of your fishing area is riddled with pirates and they are stealing fish from your legal fishing fleets. Do you:
a) ban fishing in those areas to flush the pirates out of your ocean
b) put in place even more complicated measures to create loopholes for the pirates to exploit
c) negotiate on behalf of your pet pirates and stop any measures being adopted that might upset them

 

What proportion of your delegation has vested interests in the fishing industry?
a) 0-40%
b) 40-60%
c) more than 60%

 

Where would you advise your fishing industry to invest their profits?
a) sound science and a sustainable management plan
b) more boats and bigger boats
c) parrots, eye patches and wooden legs


Pacific engineer lets off steam!

Posted by jessmil on 05/26/2008 11:10 am

fred.jpg

My name is Fred Langley Jnr. and I am from the Solomon Islands. My grand parents originated from Kiribati, China, Australia and the Solomon Islands itself and I am married with one kid. My profession is marine engineering but I am also working as a lecturer at the school of marine and fisheries studies in Honiara (capital of the Solomon Islands). I have come to know about Greenpeace through some friends of mine (Geoff and Philip) who are working for Greenpeace in Honiara.

I just completed my studies in 2004 when Greenpeace was looking for a volunteer deckhand and I decided to sign on for a three month period. So I got on board the Rainbow Warrior II in Fiji. It was also an ocean campaign and we spent roughly 18 days in the Pacific Ocean monitoring fishing vessels. We also visited a few countries in the pacific like Kiribati and Federated Stated of Micronesia. Finally we end up in Honiara where the Ocean campaign stop and Forest tree campaign started. I signed off in Indonesian a few weeks later.

When I returned home I got a job at the Marine School for more than three years before I joined the Esperanza in Honiara recently.

This trip is quite different from my first experience. I've made more new friends and have been learning more about doing actions and campaigning in addition to gaining a better understanding on the aims and goals of Greenpeace as a whole. More over I am part of the engineering team on board which has given me a wonderful opportunity to increase my experience and knowledge regarding an engineering career.

To my own opinion about all that I see and what has happened so far during this ocean campaign - I sometime feel like tears nearly drop from my eyes to see all this effort, time and money spent to save the Pacific from overfishing and illegal fishing activities. Pacific is my home and fish like tuna and others are my resources and are important for my future and future generations to come.

Just being on this ship itself is a once in a lifetime experience and the work we do is incredible. I feel I owe Greenpeace and my fellow campaigners a lot of gratitude as they have put their lives on the line to protect our ocean, and as a Pacific Islander I do give one hundred percent support to the closure of the international water and declaring them marine reserves.

As Assistant Engineer I get to help the engineers in various duties involved with the ship's welfare, maintenance of machinery, watch-keeping duties and other trouble shooting work & maintenance to ensure everything is smooth running. Although I have trained and studied engineering, I must admit that there is lots to learn regarding the role I do. Initially it was a struggle, but the engineers I work with are so helpful and the working environment is so nice compared to previous commercial container ships I did apprentice work with. What really touched me initially is the friendliness and generosity of the people I work with and it's just so easy to communicate as there are no barriers. On board, we have what we call an "open door policy" - everyone is treated equally and with the same respect and this is a very rare thing in any organisation.

There are times when I do feel a bit homesick, particularly as I do miss my wife and son who mean everything to me but what I do today as a volunteer greatly impacts our lives (Pacific Islanders) as we are fighting to defend our ocean. I know that my son and wife back at home are very proud of what I am doing for our people and I hope to instill that selflessness quality into them as well as to others.

Each night before I go back to bed I gaze up at the beautiful sky and admire the stars and breathe in that fresh Pacific breeze. Each time I see a falling star I make a wish that every person on this earth would wake up and start appreciating themselves as well as their environment, and that all form of violence towards each other would end.

Image: © Greenpeace/ Paul Hilton


how to survive cabin fever

Posted by jessmil on 05/22/2008 11:04 am

cabinfever.jpgSari, our international project leader (and my occasional cabin mate), takes a break on the ship for a game of "cabin ball".

Life on the Esperanza has been pretty mellow lately since we've been in transit. When we're not busy doing actions it can become frustrating because the days can get very monotonous. I hit a mental wall recently when I realised I am totally stuck on this ship and not getting off soon. I'd love to to go for a long walk but there's only so many times you can walk around the deck before you start feeling dizzy or someone gives you a job!

One evening, out of sheer boredom I invented a game with an inflatable ball, which has turned out to be a much loved recreational activity for some of us. It's like volleyball only the ball ricochets off the sides of my cabin and players must keep it off the floor. Some have frowned at the idea but once they start playing it they don't want to stop. The only problem is that it makes a lot of noise and tends to send other items flying around the cabin so I am on the lookout for a better location.

When I have time I love standing at the bow and watching the waves. Sometimes hundreds of flying fish rise up out of the water all at once and glide over the surface ahead of our ship for an astonishing distance before disappearing into the big blue. I'm always hoping to see dolphins but I haven't been as lucky as some of the crew - yet. We've seen quite a few birds too and even had a brown footed booby stay with us for 2 days. I was delighted to have an animal on board but the deck crew weren't happy about it at all. By the time the booby left I realised why... the deck underneath the mast at the bow was totally covered in bird poo.

Living and working on board is very different to being on land. Each day, before anyone starts their job - the toilets, showers, alleyways, mess, laundry and lounge all need to be cleaned and everyone is expected to share these duties. On Saturdays we give everything a special, big clean. Sakyo signed up to do the showers last Saturday while I was scrubbing the alleyways. The drains needed to be opened up and this brought out the most disgusting smell I have ever come across. I had to try really hard not resurrect my cheese toastie but Sakyo went right inside one of the showers and closed the door in order to give it a good clean. I thought he might actually die in there and was about to attempt a rescue operation when he surprisingly came out by himself - looking a dodgy shade of green I might add. If anyone is thinking of working on board a Greenpeace ship - my advice to you would be to avoid cleaning showers on Saturdays - at all costs.

Lately I've had a craving for orange juice but haven't seen any since I arrived on board so I went to ask the cook with the cutest face I could possibly muster and managed to get my hands on some grapefruit juice (a triumph in itself!). As I poured myself a cup of liquid gold I immediately attracted several other crew members towards me like honeybees to nectar. It's funny how so many things that you take for granted on land suddenly end up being a treasured rarity at sea. Last night I opened up the fridge and found a bottle of organic orange juice in there. I felt like I had won the jackpot on a slot machine! Perhaps there is an orange juice fairy on board who has finally granted me a wish I have been silently making every morning.

Another treat we had was when the folks on board from Japan and Korea made an Asian feast. I pitched in and Sakyo showed me how to make vegetarian sushi. It's actually a lot easier than I thought and we managed over 30 long rolls with different fishless fillings. The crew absolutely loved it and the cook enjoyed a well deserved evening off.

The ship has been getting a makeover while we've been on the move - and a lot of new paint has gone on (obviously it's important to look good while saving the planet!) but now we're all gearing up for action again. As I write this the paintbrushes are being packed away and Dingo, our helicopter pilot, is pulling the covers off Tweety.

I'd better go and get ready

             - Lisa 


Tuna TV

Posted by jessmil on 05/18/2008 12:28 pm

Solomon Islands talk about the impact of overfishing on their country and their lives.


Why are we defending the Pacific?

Posted by jessmil on 05/16/2008 12:03 pm

oceans campaigner.

Our work reaches out to the 20 Pacific Island countries in this region to move towards a sustainable and equitable fishery. I am from Fiji and as a Pacific Islander allow me to point out that the Pacific is about to hit a catastrophe with the global tuna industry that could see an end to our poor countries' economy and most importantly the livelihoods of my fellow pacific islanders.

Let me give you some shocking facts about the Pacific and I will tell you a bit about why Greenpeace is here in the Pacific and why we do what we do best and that is confront the truth, tell the world by bearing witness and speak the unspoken.

The Pacific contains the last relatively healthy tuna fishery left in the world. Most of our island countries have nothing else but their huge ocean resources to survive on both as an economic need and an important livelihood that most of our people depend on for survival. The ocean for us defines and makes us who we are and I see that this is slowly being taken away from us.

The Pacific supplies 60% of the world’s tuna market and since the 1960s the Pacific have been preyed by the greedy eyes of foreign fishing nations migrating from everywhere around the globe. Over 75% of the world’s fisheries are exploited up to and beyond the point where they can be regarded as sustainable. I remember the famous global fisheries expert Dr. Daniel Pauly saying that in the future people will be eating jellyfish, because that is all that will be left – unless we act now.

Our Pacific people have fished the ocean for thousands of years, managing traditional fishing grounds sustainably. Today over 2 million tonnes of tuna are fished from the Pacific each year. More than 90% of our tuna is caught by fleets from Japan, Korean, Taiwan, China, USA, Indonesia, Philippines and EU countries. The Pacific island countries, typically poor developing states, do not have the resources nor the man power to commercially fish themselves. Unfortunately the future of our Pacific Oceans and of everyone who lives it is, is at the mercy of unscrupulous foreign fishers and a growing global appetite for tuna.

The Pacific is at a crossroad. One path leads to sustainable and equitable fisheries, a healthy marine environment, stable and prosperous island communities while the other path leads to the collapse of the major tuna fishery and loss of livelihood and food supply for the people of the Pacific and for the future of our generations to come.

There are 4 key tuna species; bigeye, yellowfin, skipjack and albacore. Since 2001 scientists have been warning that the Pacific stocks are in trouble because there are simply too many fishing boats out here. Overfishing is occurring on the bigeye and yellowfin stocks. Seven years later and still nothing has been done to improve the management of these fisheries. Albacore and skipjack are now the focus but it is just a matter of time till these other 2 stocks are in peril.

Fishing cannot continue the way it is now. It's not about the US boats, nor the Taiwanese. Its about the overall amount of fishing in the Pacific that is just not sustainable. If you rely on political processes whether regionally or internationally to make decisions – you will cry everyday. The failure of political bodies that are tasked with the management of our ocean resources have failed one after the other around the globe. This is why over 75% of the world’s fisheries are already exploited. Now all eyes are on the Pacific. I have been working heavily within the political arena of this region for the past 6 years and every year I end up disappointed and scared for the future of my people.

Our Pacific island governments want to manage these resources and give hope to our people. But why are they not able to protect these fish stocks? The unspoken – the same fishing nations who have their boats in our waters are the countries that provide aid, development grants and infrastructural support to our nations. Our Pacific governments have tried to reason with these fishing nations but they refuse to reduce fishing.

This is where Greenpeace comes in. We are able to confront the problems and tell the story to the world and why people should care. We have history to make down here. The best way forward is to close off the Pacific Commons (because they are not managed properly and no one really has a true account of how much is being fished out from these areas) and reduce the amount of fishing inside Pacific island waters by half to ensure we save the tuna stocks from collapsing.

lagi.jpg


Image: Lagi, the lead campaigner on the Esperanza, waves goodbye to the Greenpeace ground team in the Solomon Islands as the ship departs from the Solomon Islands © Greenpeace/ Paul Hilton

Video: © Greenpeace/ Brent Balalas

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