Refleksi : Apakah Ikan di perairan Nusantara tidak akan habis,  seperti  yang 
terjadi di pesisir Somalia atau ikan Sardine di California yang menghilang pada 
tahun 1950 tak kunjung dipulihkan atau perlu dilakukan pembatasan penangkan 
ikan Laut Baltik dan laut Utara oleh UNI Europa? Rezim tukang copet NKRI 
memakai kedok pembangunan tetapi pada kenytaannya memiskin rakyat daerah 
penghasil kekayaan alam berlimpah-limpah, lihat saja pada hasil sensus 2010. 
Daerah-darah yang kaya dengan kekayaan alam menjadi daerah termiskin.


http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/asia/208440/bluefin-tuna-gets-scant-relief-at-fisheries-meet

Crunch time at bluefin tuna meet
Published: 27/11/2010 at 11:00 PM
Online news: World

Ten days of backroom dealing come to a head on Saturday when fishing nations 
announce new catch quotas for Atlantic bluefin tuna, a species many scientists 
say is teetering on the brink.
 
Photo shows Japanese fishmongers checking frozen blue-fin tuna before auction 
at the world's largest fish market in Tokyo. Ten days of backroom dealing come 
to a head when fishing nations announce new catch quotas for Atlantic bluefin 
tuna, a species many scientists say is teetering on the brink. 

Hanging in the balance is not only the long-term viability of bluefin stocks, 
but the credibility of the 48-member body that has, by its own reckoning, done 
a miserable job of managing them.

"I do hope, and I believe, that ICCAT's 'dark ages' are in the past," said 
Fabio Hazin, chairman of the International Commission for the Conservation of 
Atlantic Tunas.

"Up to 2008, commissioners were not listening to science. It was a disgrace," 
he said going into the meeting.

In the end, all the haggling over catch limits will come down to a single 
number.

The fishing industry and the countries that back them are in favour of rolling 
over the 2010 quota for bluefin tuna caught in the Atlantic and Mediterranean 
-- 13,500 tonnes -- for another year.

An October report by ICCAT's scientific committee says this would put the 
species on track for a 60-percent chance of recovering to "maximum sustainable 
yield" by 2022.

Right now, its population is estimated to be at less than a third of that mark.

Environmentalists, along with some member states and scientists, say a 
40-percent chance of failure is too high, and that even this estimate is based 
on optimistic assumptions and incomplete data.

"We are uncertain about the past, and probably more so about the future," 
acknowledged Gerald Scott, head of ICCAT's scientific committee.

The United States wants to cut current limits, while the 27-nation European 
Union is officially calling for a "stable or partially reduced quota."

But the EU is, in fact, sharply divided. While the bloc's major bluefin players 
-- France, Spain, Italy and Malta -- are pushing for the status quo, the 
European fisheries commissioner Maria Damanaki, backed by Britain, has openly 
called for a catch limit of 6,000 tonnes.

The end-point numbers floating in the corridors of the closed-door meet Friday 
ranged between 10,000 and 13,000 tonnes.

France, meanwhile, is lobbying furiously behind the scenes for an amnesty on 
its "tuna debt", incurred in 2007 when it surpassed a national quota of 5,000 
tonnes by more than 100 percent.

Without relief, it's bluefin haul for 2011 will drop from about 2,000 to 500 
tonnes, barely enough to keep a couple of commercial vessels busy during the 
one- or two-month long fishing season.

The ultimate arbiter may be Japan, which consumes more than 80 percent of 
Atlantic bluefin tuna in the form of gourmet sashimi and sushi costing up to 20 
euros (25 dollars) a mouthful in high-end restaurants.

After years of looking the other way, Tokyo is pushing ICCAT to crack down on 
rampant illegal fishing and tighten compliance measures put in place over the 
last two years.

"Japan is saying the right things, but has not put its cards on the table yet," 
said Remi Parmentier, a Madrid-based consultant for the Pew Environment Group.

Tensions this year are running especially high because Mediterranean rim 
nations -- which account for almost all of the region's authorised catch -- are 
renegotiating how to divide up the quota.

Libya, Turkey and Egypt are lobbying particularly hard to get larger slices of 
the shrinking tuna pie, according to sources sitting in on the discussions.

Any gains would likely come at the expense of the EU, whose 2010 allocation was 
more than 50 percent.

A proposal to create spawning sanctuaries in the Gulf of Mexico and six 
Mediterranean zones has failed to gain any traction, these sources say.

Industrial-scale fishing during the breeding season has been a major factor in 
driving down stocks, according to marine biologists.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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