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Legislation drafted by
NOAA to protect U.S. fishermen from unfair competition
Bill would keep vessels
with illegally caught seafood out of U.S. ports
A bill introduced in Congress yesterday would prevent
pirate fishing vessels from entering U.S. ports to offload their illegally caught seafood. This
pirate fishing is often called illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU)
fishing.
The Administration bill, which implements an
international agreement the United States helped negotiate, would benefit U.S. fishermen, seafood buyers, and consumers by keeping
illegal seafood out of global trade. It is sponsored by U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye
of Hawaii, who introduced it in the Senate yesterday, and is
co-sponsored by Sens. Begich, Snowe, Whitehouse, Murkowski, and Rockefeller.
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Jane Lubchenco PhD
NOAA Administrator
Under Secretary Of Commerce
For Oceans And Atmosphere
“Illegal fishing undermines
fishermen in the U.S. and worldwide who fish sustainably and legally, and it
can devastate fish stocks and ocean ecosystems. As one of the top importers of
seafood globally, the U.S. is committed to combating illegal fishing and ensuring
a level playing field for our fishermen. The international agreement and this
bill will close the world’s ports to illegal fishing.”
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Illegal fishing deprives law-abiding fishermen and
coastal communities around the world of up to $23.5 billion in revenue every
year, and undermines efforts to monitor and sustainably manage fisheries. Since
seafood caught through IUU fishing enters the global marketplace through
wide-ranging ports mostly outside the U.S., keeping that seafood from entering the global market
requires an international solution and the cooperation of multiple
countries.
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John Connelly
President
National Fisheries
Institute
“The sustainability
of fish and fish products and the economic integrity of those who
sell them is a priority for the seafood community. Efforts to stamp out
illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing go a long way in protecting the
resource and ensuring the global seafood industry is operating at the highest
standards. It also helps create a level playing field whereby the industry
both in the U.S. and around the world plays by the same rules.”
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Gerry Leape
Senior Officer
Pew Environment Group
“This legislation further
strengthens the United States' commitment to closing our ports to illegally caught
fish. The U.S. is the third largest seafood market in the world, so
passage of this bill will deal a heavy blow to any vessels looking to offload
and sell contraband fish.”
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This legislation arises from the first binding global
agreement to focus on combating IUU fishing, the agreement on Port State
Measures to Prevent, Deter and Eliminate Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated
Fishing. This international accord is recognized globally as a landmark
agreement. As a leader in the negotiation of the agreement, the U.S. was one of the first countries to sign it, an act that
expresses an intention to ratify the agreement. The agreement will take full
effect when 25 parties to the agreement ratify it. Three countries – Norway, Sri Lanka, and Burma – along with the European Union have already ratified
it, and 18 more countries and the U.S. have expressed an intention to ratify.
Countries that ratify the agreement
have four basic obligations:
Designating ports through
which foreign fishing vessels may enter;
Conducting dockside vessel
inspections in the designated ports, following established standards;
Blocking port entry and access
to port services to vessels known to or believed to have been involved in IUU
fishing, particularly those on the IUU vessel list of a regional fishery
management organization;
Sharing information, including
inspection results, with the governments of vessels found involved in IUU
fishing during an inspection.
U.S. law already prohibits foreign-flagged fishing vessels,
even those operating legally, from landing their catch at most U.S. ports. However, in addition to fishing vessels, the
agreement and implementing legislation extends to both transport and other
support vessels, which may be carrying IUU fish transferred to them at sea.
The implementing legislation, introduced as the Pirate
Fishing Elimination Act, follows the November 14 transmission of
the agreement itself from President Obama to the Senate. Congressional approval
of the agreement and its implementing legislation will ensure continued U.S. leadership in the global battle to stop IUU fishing
and will allow the United States to encourage broad ratification of the agreement
worldwide.
NOAA has taken a number of steps to combat IUU fishing
and prevent illegal seafood from entering the global marketplace. In September,
NOAA and the EU signed a historic statement pledging bilateral cooperation to
combat pirate fishing. The U.S. also identifies countries engaged in IUU fishing
through the U.S. High Seas Driftnet Fishing Moratorium Protect Act and
participates in international fishery management organizations to address IUU
fishing. To find out more about NOAA’s efforts to end illegal fishing, see http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/stories/iuu/.
NOAA’s mission is to understand and predict changes in
the Earth's environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the
sun, and to conserve and manage our coastal and marine resources.
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