SFP Fisheries Forum D Matt Elliot 3c58a56c

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Global  fisheries  landings    90    

Catch  (Millions  of  Tonnes)  

 80      70      60      50     Catch  

 40      30    

China  Corrected  

 20    

No  anchove:a  

 10      -­‐         1950  

1960  

1970  

1980  

1990  

2000  

2010  

Source:  FAO  Fishstat;  SAUP  data  used  to  correct  China  data  and  to  remove  Chilean  and  Peruvian  anchove:a     1  

Global  landings  rela8ve  to  fishing  effort  

Global  Catch  (Millions  of  Tonnes)  

 100    

4  

 90    

3.5  

 80     3    70     Global  Catch  -­‐  No  Anchove:a    60    

 50     1988  

Effort  Kilowa>*Days(x109)  

 110    

2.5  

Global  Fishing  Effort  

1993  

1998  

2003  

Source:  Catch  data  from  Sea  Around  Us  database;  Effort  data  from  AnKcamara,  J.A.,  Watson,  R.,  Gelchu,  A.,  Pauly,  D.,  Global  fishing   effort  (1950-­‐2010):  Trends;  gaps;  and  implicaKons,  Fisheries  Research  (2010),doi:10.1016/j.fishres.2010.10.016  

2   2008  

2  

Global  fishing  effort  

Source:  Swartz  W,  Sala  E,  Tracey  S,  Watson  R,  Pauly  D  (2010),  The  SpaKal  Expansion  and  Ecological  Footprint  of  Fisheries  (1950-­‐Present).   PLoS  ONE  5(12):  e15413.  doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0015143  

3  

Since  the  1950s:  a  southward  expansion  

1950s  

1960s  

1970s  

1980s  

1990s  

2000s  

Newly  exploited  area  (103  km2)  for  each  laKtude  class  averaged  over  each  decade  

Source:  Swartz  W,  et  al.,  2010.  The  SpaKal  Expansion  and  Ecological  Footprint  of  Fisheries  (1950-­‐Present).  PLoS  ONE  5(12):  e15413.   doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0015143  

4  

And  an  open  water  expansion  

Source:  FAO  FISHSTAT  and  SOFIA  20081   1.  SOFIA  report  does  not  idenKfy  what  species  have  been  assigned  to  “epipelagic:  other  species”  or  “deep-­‐water  species”  categories  

5  

And  an  expansion  deeper  into  the  water  column  

Pelagics  (EEZ)   Bo>om  Marine   Fishes  (EEZ)   Pelagics     (High  Seas)  

▪  “Fishing  fleets  are  working  

deeper  and  deeper    [in  the   North  AtlanKc].”  

▪  “Bathymetric  expansion  is   happening  and  EU  countries   are  the  biggest  deep-­‐sea   fishers.”    

▪  “You  would  be  surprised  by   the  deepwater  fishing   happening  in  Asia.”  

Bo>om  Marine   Fishes  (High  Seas)  

Source:  Morato,  T.,  et  al.,  2006.  Fishing  down  the  deep.  Fish  and  Fisheries  7(1):  24-­‐34.   *High  Seas  defined  as  areas  outside  EEZs    

6  

Huge  shiR  in  the  distribu8on  of  landings  

Catch  trends  by  income  of  fishing  country   40  

Landings  (MMT)  

35  

Lower  middle   income  

30   25  

Upper  income  

20  

Upper  middle   income  

15   10   5   0   1975  

Lower  income   1980  

1985  

1990  

1995  

2000  

2005  

2010  

Source:  FAO  FISHSTAT;  SAUP;  World  Bank   7  

Marine  fisheries  landings  of  the  top  8  lower-­‐middle  income  countries   30  

Catch  (Millions  of  Tonnes)  

25   Ecuador   20   15   10   5  

Morocco   VietNam   Thailand   Philippines   India   Indonesia   China  

0   Year   Source:  FAO,  Sea  Around  Us  Project,  and  World  Bank  country  classificaKons   8  

Interpreta8ons  regarding  the  extent  of  overexploita8on  vary  greatly   Under  or  fully  exploited   Crashed  and  overexploited  

Global  trends  in  fishery  exploita8on   FAO  assessment   1974  

1985  

10 %   90 %  

18 %  

1995  

27 %   82 %  

2004  

25 %   73 %  

75 %  

1995  

2004  

UBC  assessment   1974  

19 %  

81 %  

1985  

35 %  

65 %  

50 %  

50 %  

28%   72%  

Source:  FAO  SOFIA  2008;  FAO  SOFIA  2010;  Pauly  et  al.,  2008;  www.seaaroundus.org     9  

Most  assessed  stocks  appear  to  be  healthy  or  in  the  process  of  rebuilding…  

High   fishing   mortality  

Low   fishing   mortality  

Low   biomass  

High   biomass   10  

Even  within  developed  countries,  rebuilding  has  progressed  unevenly     Europe  

USA  

Pacific  Canada  

Sources:  Costello,  C.,  Gaines,  S.  2011,  EvaluaKng  Fisheries  Sustainability.    

New  Zealand  

Atlan8c  Canada  

11  

But  only  a  handful  of  countries  have  stock  assessments  to  draw  from   Not  overfished   Rebuilding   Not  yet  rebuilding   High  exploitaKon  

=Ecosystem  Models   =Stock  Assessments   =Research  Surveys  

Source:  Worm  et  al.,  2009   12  

Industrializing  and  developing  countries  self-­‐report  moderate  to  poor   management  effec8veness  

41   Worst  

100   Best  

Source:  Mora,  Camillo,  et  al.,  Management  EffecKveness  of  the  World’s  Marine  Fisheries.  PLOS  Biol  7(6)   13  

These  regions  are  cri8cal  for  biodiversity:  Southeast  Asia,  East  Africa,  the  Caribbean  

14  

They’re  also  among  the  most  cri8cal  for  food  security:  Southeast  Asia  and   West  Africa  

15  

An  analysis  of  unassessed  fish  stocks  found  that  75%  were  depleted  or  low   abundance  compared  to  45%  of  assessed  stocks   Unassessed  stocks  

Assessed  stocks  

(4.1M  tonnes)  

(11.7M  tonnes)  

Healthy  4  

22%  

Depleted  1  

28%  

Fair     abundance  

Healthy       9%  

Depleted   30%  

16%  

23%   27%   Fair     abundance  3  

Low     abundance  2  

45%   Low     abundance  

Source:  Costello,  C.,  Gaines,  S.  2011,  EvaluaKng  Fisheries  Sustainability;  CEA  analysis   1    B/B MSY1.2  

16  

Fundamentally,  assessed  fish  stocks  are  managed  far  be>er  than  non-­‐ assessed  stocks   High  

=  Unassessed   =  Assessed  

Fishing   Pressure  

Low   Low  

Biomass  

High  

17  

Non-­‐target-­‐species,  including  birds,  fish,  turtles,  and  cetaceans,  have   experienced  steep  popula8on  declines1  

1    %  Decline  measured  from  prisKne  condiKons  

before  human  impact  

Source:  Jackson,  J.,  2008.  Ecological  exKncKon  and  evoluKon  in  the  brave  new  ocean.  PNAS,  105:  11458-­‐11465   18  

Shark  popula8ons  con8nue  to  decline  globally  –  catastrophically  in  the   Mediterranean   Central  Pacific  

PopulaKon  n  Decline  (%)  

PopulaKon  n  Decline  (%)  

100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

Thresher   Silky   Oceanic   Mako   whiteKp  

Blue  

Eastern  Atlan8c  

Mako  

Large   coastal   species  

Hammer-­‐ head  

100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

Northwest  Atlan8c  

100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%

Gulf  of  Mexico  

Silky  

Oceanic   whiteKp  

Mako  

Dusky  

Mediterranean   Nearly  all  shark   species  in  the   Mediterranean  have   declined  by  over  97%   in  a  span  of  20  years   Thresher   Por-­‐ Hammer-­‐   Devil     Blue   beagle   head   fish  

Source:  Ferres,  F.,  et  al.  ,2010.  Pa:erns  and  ecosystem  consequences  of  shark  declines  in  the  ocean.  Ecology  Le:ers,  13  (8):  1055-­‐1071   19  

Bycatch  and  harves8ng  are  primary  threats  for  the  most  IUCN  red  listed   marine  species   300  

Number  of  species  

250   200  

Sea  Birds   Sea  Turtles  

150  

Sharks   Cetaceans  

100   50   0  

Bycatch  

Harvest  

Habitat  

NonnaKve   Disturbance   Species  

PolluKon  

Climate  

Total  number  of  species  of  cetaceans,  sharks,  sea  turtles,  and  seabirds  in  the  IUCN  red  list  database  (h:p://www.iucnredlist.org/)  affected   by  threat  categories    Source:    Finkelstein  M,  et  al.  (2008)  EvaluaKng  the  PotenKal  EffecKveness  of  Compensatory  MiKgaKon  Strategies  for  Marine  Bycatch.  PLoS   ONE  3(6):  e2480.  doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0002480  

20  

At  current  expansion  rates,  it  would  take  more  than  35  years  for  MPAs  to  cover   10%  of  the  world’s  oceans  

Source  -­‐  Wood,  L.,  L.  Fish,  J.  Laughren  and  D.  Pauly.  2008.  Assessing  progress  towards  global  marine  protecKon  targets:  shorualls  in  informaKon   and  acKon.  Oryx  42(3):  340-­‐351.  

21  

To  summarize:  the  state  of  global  fisheries  varies  substan8ally  by  region   (developed,  middle  income/high  seas,  developing)  

41   Worst  

100   Best  

Source:  Mora,  Camillo,  et  al.,  Management  EffecKveness  of  the  World’s  Marine  Fisheries.  PLOS  Biol  7(6)   22  

What  can  we  do  about  it?  

   

23  

Three  cross-­‐cujng  approaches  to  help  fix  global  fisheries  

Policy  advocacy  

Intergovernmental   engagements  

Market     transforma8on  

24  

Three  cross-­‐cujng  approaches  to  help  fix  global  fisheries   Define  and   support  best   prac8ces  

Procurement  of  cerKfied   seafood  or   environmentally   preferable  seafood  

Use  purchasing   power  to   promote  change  

Fishery  improvement   projects;  cerKfied   seafood  

Market  Transforma8on   Raise  visibility  of   seafood  issues   with  consumers  

Joint  markeKng  efforts,   seafood  counter   materials,  branding  

Support  the   Policy  support  (e.g.  CFP   policies  needed  to   reform)   lock  in  long  term   supply  

25  

Priority  markets  for  the  sustainable  seafood  movement     Loca8on  

Consump8on    

Stage  of  CSR  in  marketplace  

Market  type  

Northern   Europe  

6M  tonnes    (5%)  

Strong  CSR  and  highest  levels  of  seafood   engagement  

Core  market  

US/Canada  

8.2M  tonnes    (7%)  

Strong  CSR  and  growing  seafood  engagement   Core  market  

Australia/NZ  

0.6M  tonnes    (0.6%)  

Strong  CSR  and  high  levels  of  seafood   engagement  

Core  market  

Japan  

7M  tonnes    (6%)  

Strong  CSR,  but  limited  salience  of  seafood  

Expansion  market  

Southern   Europe  

5M  tonnes    (4%)  

Some  CSR  development,  but  limited  seafood   Expansion  market   CSR  

China  

34M  tonnes    (29%)  

Minimal  CSR  penetraKon  

Poten,al   expansion  market  

Mexico  

1.3M  tonnes    (1%)  

Minimal  CSR  penetraKon,  but  select   companies  progressing  

Poten,al   expansion  market  

Brazil  

1.3M  tonnes    (1%)  

Minimal  CSR  penetraKon,  but  retail   engagement  on  other  commodiKes  

Poten,al   expansion  market  

South  Africa  

0.4M  tonnes    (0.3%)  

AcKve  adopKon  of  some  CSR  acKviKes/ standards  

Poten,al   expansion  market  

      Korea,   Taiwan,   3.8M  tonnes  (3%)   RelaKvely  advanced  CSR,  but  limited  seafood   Poten,al    *  FAO  apparent  consumpKon  data.    Includes  aquaculture   Singapore   salience  to  date   expansion  market  

Purchasing  power:  core  and  current  expansion  markets  represent  over  half  of   global  seafood  imports  by  value;  suggested  new  markets  cover  85%   ▪  Core:  Northern  Europe,  US,  Canada,  Australia/NZ   ▪  Current  Expansion:  Spain,  Italy,  Japan,  Sweden,  S.   Africa   ▪  European  Expansion  Markets:  Austria,   Switzerland,  Denmark,  Norway,  Ireland,  Russia,   Portugal,  Poland,  Belgium,  Greece,  Finland   ▪  Asia  Expansion:  China,  South  Korea,  Hong  Kong,   Taiwan,  Singapore   ▪  Americas  Expansion:  Brazil,  Mexico,  Chile,  Peru,   ArgenKna   Importance  by  Seafood  Consump8on  

Importance  by  Import  Volume   Core   Current   expansion   Europe   Expansion   Asia  Expansion   S.  America   Expansion   No.  

Importance  by  Import  Value  

Core  

Core  

Current  expansion  

Asia  Expansion  

Current   expansion   Europe   Expansion   Asia  Expansion  

S.  America   Expansion  

S.  America   Expansion  

Europe  Expansion  

27  

Landed  weight  of  fish  in  the  MSC  program  has  grown  rapidly;  now  covers   more  than  10%  of  wild  fish  landings  (cer8fied  or  in  assessment)   10  

Wild  landings  (Millions  of  Tonnes)  

9  

20%   CAGR  

8  

4  

7   2  

6   3  

5   4  

CerKfied  Fish   3  

3   2   1  

Under  Assessment  

5  

5  

2010  

2011  

4   2  

0   2008  

2009  

28  

FIPs  have  been  growing  in  popularity  worldwide,  and  show  great  promise  for   driving  improvement  in  fisheries   Northern     Europe   3  

Canada   1   19  

Mexico   5  

Russia   9  

United  States  

Central  America/   3   Caribbean  

14  

India   2  

South  America  

65  

7   Southeast  Asia  

2   East  Africa  

Total  number  of  FIPs   iden8fied  in  survey   (with  market  partners)  

Source:  CEA  survey  of  NRDC,  EDF,  SFP,  WWF,  GMRI  in  2010     29  

~20%  of  global  landings  are  now  involved  in  an  SFP  or  WWF  FIP   Millions  of  tonnes   19%   82   23%   80   78   76   11.30   74   15.33   72   70   68   66   65.24   64   62   4   2   0  

Non-­‐ FIPs  

FIPs  

2.59  

0.00   0.14  

0.39  

Small   White   Salmon   Flauish   Shrimp   pelagics   fish   Prawn  

0.00   0.90  

Tuna   tuna-­‐   like  

0.12  

0.09  

0.00  

Moll   Snapper   Crab   Squid   -­‐usks   Grouper   Lobster   Octopus  

30  

Percent  consumed  in  core  markets  (By  weight)  

The  market  transforma8on  model  has  been  demonstrated  in  whitefish,   flarish,  and  salmon  

80%   70%  

Assessing  the  poten8al  for  market  engagement  by   commodity  group   Scale   5M  Tonnes  

Whitefish  

60%   50%   40%  

Mollusks  

Shrimp   30%  

Tuna   Crabs  

20%  

Flarish   Salmon  

Snapper/   10%   Grouper   0%  

Squid  

Small  Pelagics  

0%   10%   20%   30%   40%   50%   60%   70%   80%   Percent  landed  by  countries  with  strong  governance  (By  weight)   Source:  FAO  FISHSTAT,  trade  flow  data,  and  CEA  analysis   See  appendix  for  details  on  methodology  

31  

Ques8ons?         Ma:hew  Ellio:   ma:[email protected]