Ocean Resource Privatization
Articles Posted by Date
The New England groundfish debacle (Part III): who or what is at fault? Nils E. Stolpe/FishNet
NILS STOLPE: The New England groundfish debacle (Part IV): Is cutting back harvest really the answer?
While it’s a fact that’s hardly ever acknowledged, the assumption in fisheries management is that if the population of a stock of fish isn’t at some arbitrary level, it’s because of too much fishing. Hence the term “overfished.” Hence the mandated knee jerk reaction of the fisheries managers to not enough fish; cut back on fishing. What of other factors? They don’t count. It’s all about fishing, because fishing is all that the managers can control; it’s their Maslow’s Hammer. When it comes to the oceans it seems as if it’s about all that the industry connected mega-foundations that support the anti-fishing ENGOs with hundreds of millions of dollars a year in “donations” are interested in controlling. Read the article here
-
Recent Posts
-
Mystery surrounds alarm failure on sunken Alaska Juris, a siren that could “wake the dead”
When water first began flooding into the Alaska Juris on July 26, a network of bilge alarms should have unleashed a cacophony of sound to alert Read More » -
Bucking conventional wisdom, researchers find black sea bass tougher than expected – discard mortality rates
The researchers had put the fish in the experimental group into one of four categories: those without visible injury; those with visible barotrauma; those with hook Read More » -
SW Cornwall fishing industry fears destruction from Coronavirus and a ‘no deal’ Brexit double whammy
The South West fishing industry faces potential destruction from a “no deal” Brexit coupled with the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, a leading industry figure says. Jim Portus, Read More » -
Denmark pays out Brexit compensation
Compensation totaling DKK1.2 billion has been paid out to Danish fishing operators to mitigate the adverse effects of Brexit on the country’s fishing industry, including the Read More » -
The “New” Gulf of Maine Fish War – Local fishermen fight ‘ridiculous’ recreational ban
Recreational and charter boats are essentially banned from fishing due to this, and local fishermen believe this decision is flawed because they say they have data Read More » -
For the Love of Cod – the fight over fish stocks may well spell the end of cod fishers—or cod
A hard exhale escapes Sherrylynn Rowe before she can help herself. “It was so disappointing,” she says. A Canadian federal government report, released in March 2018, Read More » -
State stops Mainer from sedating lobsters with marijuana smoke before being cooked
State regulators have put a halt to a Maine restaurant owner’s experiment of sedating live lobsters with marijuana smoke before they are cooked, at least for Read More » -
Big Three Conspire to Fix U.S. Tuna Prices, Wholesaler Says in Antitrust Class Action
The “oligopolistic structure” of the nation’s three largest packed-seafood companies – StarKist, Bumble Bee and Tri-Union – helps them conspire to fix tuna prices, a class Read More » -
Glovertown Fish plant has work, but no workers
In a province that has seen some of the highest unemployment rates in the country, it must be hard for employers to fathom there is a Read More » -
Canada, Nova Scotia move to improve fishing vessel safety
On the eve of the most lucrative fishery in Canada, federal and provincial authorities are ramping up fishing vessel inspections in Nova Scotia seeking proof of Read More » -
Letter to the Editor: This is an open letter to NOAA regional administrator John Bullard. Dear John, I’m leaving you. You’ve lost me. Paul Cohan, Captain, F/V Sasquatch Gloucester
This is an open letter to NOAA regional administrator John Bullard. Dear John, I’m leaving you. You’ve lost me. You’ve tripped yourself up in your misinformation Read More » -
Scungilli! – Whelk, Once Ignored by Fishermen, Now a Prized Catch
The sea snails known by Italian-Americans as scungilli used to be such a niche market that fishermen ignored them when they turned up in lobster traps Read More » -
Coast Guard responding to rescue 2 aboard sinking fishing vessel
U.S. Coast Guard helicopter crews are working to rescue two people aboard a fishing vessel sinking off the Oregon Coast Saturday morning, the service’s Pacific Northwest branch Read More » -
F/V Susan Rose: Coast Guard suspends search for missing fisherman
The Coast Guard has suspended its search for a missing fisherman who went overboard on Friday morning. According to a post on social media, the USCG Read More » -
South Atlantic Offshore drilling fight is still on
Despite a major victory in November, the fight against drilling for oil off South Carolina’s coast isn’t over yet. President Barack Obama used his executive power Read More » -
State regulators: Lobster season will have to wait – a sudden influx of right whales
Lobstermen already have to observe a three month closure from Feb. 1 to April 30 annually in an effort to reduce the number of whales that Read More » -
Fishing boats become citizen science data platforms – What a Novel Idea!
Prof Hart said that the current work is attempting to bridge the divide between scientists and commercial fishermen, allowing them to have a direct voice in the Read More » -
F/V Scandies Rose: Stuart Coast Guardsman recalls saving two fishermen off coast of Alaska
“I just told myself this what I trained for. I volunteered to do this so I knew what I had to. It was up to me Read More » -
Industry-wide reductions begin as menhaden cap becomes law
REEDVILLE—Menhaden, alewife, mossbunker, fatbacks, bunker or pogy—no matter what it’s called—the fish is making news up and down the East Coast as the Atlantic States Marine Read More » -
Cormorant, Fisheries Act concerns need to be addressed
Cormorant management and Canada’s Fisheries Act are just two of the issues that members of the Committee of Advisors to the Great Lakes Fishery Commission have Read More » -
Maine officials consider seasonal adjustments to minimum lobster size, tiered licenses
About 50 people, most of them fishermen, met at the Alamo theater with Maine Department of Marine Resources officials on Wednesday. The meeting was one of Read More » -
Boris Worm, Coming Around Again – ‘Extinction’ of saltwater fish to fishing bandied on social media
Continuous reverences to the Nothing but Jellyfish 2048 dogma that was used in Pews “Oceans of Abundance” to compel Obama to create the National Ocean Policy Read More » -
Rare Yellow Lobster Caught In Waters Off Niantic
Fisherman Jere Lacoske beat odds of 1 in 30 million Sunday when he hauled in a yellow lobster off the coast of Black Point in Niantic. Read More » -
Monterey Bay Fishermen hit with new wave of Dungeness crab season delays
You couldn’t blame crab fishermen Tim and Dan Obert for feeling like they’re passing through the perfect storm. First there was the pandemic, which shut down Read More » -
Scottish Port Feels Force Of UK Fishing Storm
In Peterhead, a major port in northeast Scotland and Europe’s largest wholesale market for white fish, Brexit was supposed to offer “a sea of opportunity” for Read More »
-
Archives
- March 2024 (185)
- February 2024 (192)
- January 2024 (211)
- December 2023 (188)
- November 2023 (202)
- October 2023 (180)
- September 2023 (101)
- August 2023 (241)
- July 2023 (237)
- June 2023 (211)
- May 2023 (235)
- April 2023 (210)
- March 2023 (215)
- February 2023 (179)
- January 2023 (187)
- December 2022 (178)
- November 2022 (187)
- October 2022 (190)
- September 2022 (177)
- August 2022 (203)
- July 2022 (186)
- June 2022 (184)
- May 2022 (186)
- April 2022 (190)
- March 2022 (219)
- February 2022 (167)
- January 2022 (192)
- December 2021 (191)
- November 2021 (182)
- October 2021 (196)
- September 2021 (197)
- August 2021 (205)
- July 2021 (221)
- June 2021 (211)
- May 2021 (221)
- April 2021 (204)
- March 2021 (202)
- February 2021 (188)
- January 2021 (195)
- December 2020 (193)
- November 2020 (181)
- October 2020 (204)
- September 2020 (195)
- August 2020 (189)
- July 2020 (205)
- June 2020 (194)
- May 2020 (225)
- April 2020 (218)
- March 2020 (216)
- February 2020 (209)
- January 2020 (233)
- December 2019 (227)
- November 2019 (240)
- October 2019 (241)
- September 2019 (241)
- August 2019 (270)
- July 2019 (288)
- June 2019 (270)
- May 2019 (263)
- April 2019 (223)
- March 2019 (210)
- February 2019 (155)
- January 2019 (117)
- December 2018 (216)
- November 2018 (169)
- October 2018 (218)
- September 2018 (247)
- August 2018 (258)
- July 2018 (259)
- June 2018 (250)
- May 2018 (251)
- April 2018 (247)
- March 2018 (266)
- February 2018 (256)
- January 2018 (278)
- December 2017 (309)
- November 2017 (281)
- October 2017 (288)
- September 2017 (275)
- August 2017 (284)
- July 2017 (287)
- June 2017 (273)
- May 2017 (276)
- April 2017 (275)
- March 2017 (300)
- February 2017 (252)
- January 2017 (288)
- December 2016 (263)
- November 2016 (268)
- October 2016 (287)
- September 2016 (284)
- August 2016 (293)
- July 2016 (286)
- June 2016 (273)
- May 2016 (246)
- April 2016 (267)
- March 2016 (260)
- February 2016 (265)
- January 2016 (269)
- December 2015 (266)
- November 2015 (281)
- October 2015 (289)
- September 2015 (286)
- August 2015 (298)
- July 2015 (294)
- June 2015 (329)
- May 2015 (316)
- April 2015 (317)
- March 2015 (324)
- February 2015 (301)
- January 2015 (332)
- December 2014 (322)
- November 2014 (330)
- October 2014 (382)
- September 2014 (340)
- August 2014 (347)
- July 2014 (376)
- June 2014 (401)
- May 2014 (344)
- April 2014 (341)
- March 2014 (375)
- February 2014 (374)
- January 2014 (360)
- December 2013 (294)
- November 2013 (372)
- October 2013 (391)
- September 2013 (461)
- August 2013 (566)
- July 2013 (526)
- June 2013 (447)
- May 2013 (475)
- April 2013 (508)
- March 2013 (459)
- February 2013 (352)
- January 2013 (265)
- December 2012 (206)
- November 2012 (168)
- October 2012 (187)
- September 2012 (126)
- August 2012 (4)
Tags
Alaska Alaska Department of Fish and Game Athearn Marine Agency Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission Boat of the Week BOEM Brexit British Columbia California canada Coast Guard commercial fisherman commercial fishermen commercial fishing Coronavirus Department of Fisheries and Oceans DFO Dungeness crab FISH-NL Gulf of Maine Gulf of St. Lawrence lobster Louisiana maine Maine Department of Marine Resources Maine Lobstermen’s Association massachusetts National Marine Fisheries Service new-england-fishery-management-council Newfoundland and Labrador New Jersey NMFS NOAA North Atlantic right whale North Carolina Fisheries Association North Pacific Fishery Management Council Nova Scotia Obituary offshore wind offshore wind farm offshore wind farms Oregon Scotland United Kingdom weekly update
Comments
- Chris Kinder on ENGO Sues UK Government Over International Fishing Quotas
- borehead - Moderator on Mystic Aquarium (the Whale People) expands offshore wind exhibit with youth in mind
- Kath on Mystic Aquarium (the Whale People) expands offshore wind exhibit with youth in mind
- John Harrison jr on Commercial fishermen react to MFC mullet decision
- borehead - Moderator on The CARES Act: Lengthy Process, Little to Show for Connecticut Fisheries
- Randall on The CARES Act: Lengthy Process, Little to Show for Connecticut Fisheries
- Oscar navarrete on Sam Parisi asks, How Accurate is NOAA and NOAA Fishery Survey Science?
- Oscar navarrete on Sam Parisi asks, How Accurate is NOAA and NOAA Fishery Survey Science?
- sam on Darren Byler files Two Multi-Million Dollar Lawsuits Against the Coast Guard and the City of Kodiak for the Illegal Sinking of the M/V Wild Alaskan
- Charles on For a 2nd day, harvesters call on N.L. government to open market to outside buyers
- Clint Collamore on Maine Lobstermen’s Association tallies its victories, future risks at annual meeting
- Mike Amari on Capt. Charlie Griffin, ‘Wicked Tuna’ star, dies in boating accident on the Outer Banks; passenger missing
- Joel Hovanesian on NOAA postpones controversial bottom trawling experiment in Alaska’s Northern Bering Sea
- William Diller on Floating offshore wind experts say they want to coexist with Maine lobstermen, but lobstermen say no thanks
- Charles Bernier on Here’s how activists use lobstermen as bait to endanger Maine industry, communities
- Nils E. Stolpe on Oregon: Fishing group reacts to BOEM news on offshore wind
- Steven Palmateer on Crawling with crab … at last
- JuneauTek on Commercial Fisherman in Northern California Takes Legal Action to Challenge Dock Prices
- borehead - Moderator on Commercial Fisherman in Northern California Takes Legal Action to Challenge Dock Prices
- JuneauTek on Commercial Fisherman in Northern California Takes Legal Action to Challenge Dock Prices
- MaryBeth on Sam Parisi asks, How Accurate is NOAA and NOAA Fishery Survey Science?
- Chris Iversen on F/V Aleutian Storm: A Race Against Time for Salvage and Environmental Protection
- Keith Uzzell on Sam Parisi asks, How Accurate is NOAA and NOAA Fishery Survey Science?
- Dave Sullivan on Sam Parisi asks, How Accurate is NOAA and NOAA Fishery Survey Science?
- Arthur Ochse on NEW RUTGERS STUDY CONFIRMS HYPOXIC EVENT LAST SUMMER OFF THE NEW JERSEY COAST BY JIM LOVGREN
- borehead - Moderator on One fish, two fish, redfish, dead wish – Something fishy’s going on, and Furey and Hutchings should be getting us answers.
- New Rutgers Study Confirms Hypoxic Event Last Summer off the New Jersey Coast By Jim Lovgren – IWMC – World Conservation Trust on Is the Great Fishkill of 1976 About to be Repeated? By Jim Lovgren
- Dave on From Bubba Gump to bust? American shrimpers face extinction.
- james R Lovgren on Pallone, Environmentalists Want Shipping Speeding Rules Enforced
- John Harrison jr on Fisheries division schedules day-long symposium on troubled summer flounder fishery
-
Facebook
Bore Head…
I replied to someone with this very comment about remembering D-Day:
“This
is a good day to stop and think about what American and Allied troops
went through seventy years ago on “D DAY”. And thank God you didn’t have
to jump off a landing craft on that beach, and think that they did this
to liberate people they never met.”
My reply:
Yes
it is, a day to give a few moments to reflect on one of the most world
changing battles in human history, the “D-DAY” beach landing.
There
was a story on the radio yesterday of a man who was with the “SCREAMING EAGLES” of the 101st, parachuting down into a hornets nest of NAZI SS….and he said it was literally a “turkey-shoot” for them, as he
remembered descending through what could be described as fireworks
coming up from the ground. How he lived though this day he was asked,
and as he said back, “what could you say, it just wasn’t his time.”
You
can see the black and white videos of our Airborne Corps, a number
making their final jump…. or other news reels taken of and during the landing on the beaches off Normandy….I highly doubt you can truly
understand the terror during the early hours of the engagement, where
the surf line along Omaha was described as “bloody red” and the bodies
of the drowned washing up throughout the day, next to men who were killed as they took their first and last steps along those sandy beaches in France.
Little
is talked about the hardship of the men in the landing crafting heading
towards the beach…… a good number suffering severe sea sickness due
to eating large meals prior to boarding, and then the rough seas that morning they encountered in the English Channel.
How come so many
in this country forget that we have so much because of men like this who would sacrifice themselves in standing up to evil?
There is
the monument of the “Les Braves” on that very beach that marks the day when Americans helped to liberate the world, but when you see the
pictures and videos of the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial, it
puts into perspective how many of our troops lost their life on those initial days in liberating as you said, “people they have never met…”
or people some of the would ever know. Children, grand children,,,They were magnificent.
We were blessed, thanks to that brave, unselfish generation that was by far the best this country has ever produced.
I thought of this song today. Hadn’t heard it for a long time. Definitely gives fuel for reflection.
Best regards, Ec.