Ocean Resource Privatization
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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
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Recent Posts
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Trawl fleet continuing to fish for Pacific cod, first committee hearing to advance Dr. Roland Maw, lively and contentious!
The boats fishing for Pacific cod with pots in the central Gulf of Alaska federal season finally wrapped up their 17.9 million pound quota Monday, a Read More » -
Building blocks of ocean food web in rapid decline as plankton productivity plunges
They’re teeny, tiny plants and organisms but their impact on ocean life is huge. Phytoplankton and zooplankton that live near the surface are the base of Read More » -
Expert skeptical of Washington state’s orca-saving proposal
“The question is: What’s the problem and what’s the solution?” Ray Hilborn told KIRO Radio’s Dave Ross. “And I have to say, I’m a bit skeptical Read More » -
Alitak District setnetters scrambling after OBI dismantles area’s salmon market months before summer season starts
OBI Seafoods announced earlier this month [March 8] that it would not be buying salmon from the setnet fleet in Kodiak’s Alitak District. The decision does Read More » -
Groundswell – Revisiting MSA Reauthorization 2006 – Who Owns the Flying Duck? by Terry Haines
Who owns the air? Who owns the ocean? Who owns a duck flying overhead, on his way to his summer house in the Arctic marshes? Does everyone? Read More » -
Florida Keys Fisherman Can’t Dip A Toe In Keys Waters For Five Years
A commercial fisherman in the Florida Keys has been sentenced in a case involving undersized lobster. The sentence also keeps him out of the water for Read More » -
Lucy the Lobster Predicts Six More Weeks of Winter
Lucy crawled out from the ocean at Cape Sable Island Causeway at 8 a.m. and predicted “6 more weeks of wonderful winter! February in Nova Scotia Read More » -
Cause of Action Institute sues NOAA For New England Fishery Management Council information on member selection
In its July 13 FOIA request, Cause of Action sought information on how the Secretary of Commerce and NOAA select members in the New England Fishery Read More » -
Far North iwi creating fishery pathways for rangatahi in South Island
The fisheries sector in Te Waipounamu (South Island) has a number of career opportunities for both rangatahi (young people) and those with more experience. Two Far Read More » -
Pacific Marine Center Expands Capabilities With New Marine Travelift 200CII Boat Hoist (200 TON CAPACITY)
Marine Travelift Inc. has announced the delivery of its 200CII mobile boat hoist to Pacific Marine Center for use at their facility in Anacortes, Washington. Pacific Read More » -
There is Nothing Like a Lobsterboat Race
As a sports reporter, I’ve covered just about every big championship the sports world has to offer. But none come close to being as hardcore as Read More » -
Cable Under Gardiner’s Bay Sparks Debate – Trustees, baymen talk wind farm landing sites
When officials of Deepwater Wind, the Rhode Island company that plans to construct an offshore wind farm 30 miles from Montauk, presented its plans to the Read More » -
Jamaican lobster fishing vessel with 15 onboard missing since Tuesday
A search is ongoing for a Jamaican vessel with 15 people onboard that has been missing since Tuesday afternoon. The lobster fishing vessel, Falling Star, is Read More » -
California: Can wind energy and fishing industry co-exist on the coast?
A statehouse hearing on offshore wind energy explored “The Future of Fisheries and Offshore Wind Energy in the Golden State” and fishing representatives said the scenario Read More » -
Coast Guard, local agencies searching for 2 fisherman near Nantucket from 4 man crew
Coast Guard crews along with local agencies and good Samaritans are searching for two fisherman after their fishing boat sank Monday evening 10 miles southeast of Read More » -
Nova Scotia MP says he faced death threats as Maritime elver fishery descended into lawlessness
MPs in Ottawa heard “alarming” accounts Thursday of failed Canadian government efforts to thwart the black-market fishery for baby eels, or elvers, earlier this year. It included Read More » -
South Atlantic Fishery Management Council to discuss closing Georgetown Hole, other areas, to fishing
Murrells Inlet seafood dealer Chris Conklin will be sworn as a new member of the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council at the start of the council’s Read More » -
U.S. Crustacean Market to hit $10.2 billion by 2026
The U.S. is among the biggest markets for seafood & seafood-based products and it is ever-growing due to its inherent health benefits. The growth of the Read More » -
FISH-NL reiterates call for province to allow in outside buyers after panel sets 2018 snow crab price at far less than the mainland
The Federation of Independent Sea Harvesters of Newfoundland and Labrador (FISH-NL) says the decision of the Fish Price Setting Panel to set the 2018 price for Read More » -
Chile accuses Marine Harvest of damaging environment after 600,000 salmon injected with antibiotics escape
Chile’s environment ministry on Monday (Aug 6) accused the local unit of Norway’s Marine Harvest of damaging the environment after hundreds of thousands of salmon escaped Read More » -
Maine’s lobster industry needs your help
A little over a week ago, we saw more than a thousand lobstermen flood the Stonington commercial pier. Almost the entire Maine delegation attended in person Read More » -
Maritime Lobster fishermen continue fight against low prices
CBC News Posted: May 11, 2013 1:42 PM AT Protests continue across the Maritimes as many lobster fishermen refuse to fish until lobster brokers agree to pay Read More » -
Door control from the wheelhouse
The idea of a pair of trawl doors that can be adjusted at the turn of a dial rather than by shifting attachment points and backstrops Read More » -
Athearn Marine Agency Boat of the Week: 35′ Duffy Lobster Boat, 330HP John Deere, 4′ Aluminum Stern Extension
To review specifications, information, and 42 photos’, >click here<, To see all the boats in this series >click here< 11:55 Read More » -
Does Newfoundland Fisherman Tony Doyle have the answer NOAA Doesn’t?
It’s a huge mystery to NOAA scientists. Where have the fish gone? The ENGO bunch seems happy to say that the New England fishing fleet has depleted Read More »
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Comments
- borehead - Moderator on Letter to the editor in rebuttal of “Anonymous”
- borehead - Moderator on Letter to the editor in rebuttal of “Anonymous”
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- Joel Hovanesian on Where Have All The Right Whales Gone?
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- Sid Hounsell on BREAKING: FFAW AND ASP REACH AGREEMENT TO GET SNOW CRAB FISHERY STARTED
- Scott on California’s ocean salmon fishing season closed for second year in a row
- Fran Szymanek on Offshore Wind Electrical Substations; The Secret, Silent Killers by Jim Lovgren
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- borehead - Moderator on Time to save the Right Whale from the Green-Left
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Facebook
I have said many times, that the answer to killing this monster of Windmills in Saltwater and the SCAM being perpetrated on the public and those who love the oceans as we do-is through a lawsuit and not through political parties.
No matter how many posts I read blaming both political parties, yes there are differences, but if either party and I mean the Democrats OR the Republicans truly got behind killing this project, either party could do it!
I’m not saying one party is not more responsible than the other, but I am telling you even if the Republican Party with their massive influence of the Supreme Court as well as controlling the House of Representatives-it could be done BUT IT’S NOT!!!!
This is not a statement made because I prefer one party over the other, I think they should throw all these BUMS out, start with younger people with new ideas, without the visceral hatred running rampant through much of our counry and without all this luggage- and put on term limits and then we will have some assemblance of a successful government!
Yes, we have totally dedicated heros here and there like Jeff Van Drew or Paul Katrina, but most of’s politicians are being influenced by unions to move ahead on this project to CREATE JOBS!!-that’s like creating jobs by building guillotines to cut people’s heads off!
If you want to stop this wind turbine project IT MUST BE DONE THROUGH THE COURTS because we don’t have time to waste with all this insane politics and all of the Facebook posts, it is NOT getting us where we need to be!
While we all preach to the choir and each other, the wind turbines and the cement bases needed AND the copper cables buried needed are all being laid into our oceans and destroying it while we argue and pray that something should CHANGE.
The most efficient way to change it as I see it is through a lawsuit and a stop order of construction,-MY GOSH! the reasons this can be justified to STOP are IMMENSE!
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LESS TALKING, AND MORE ACTION THROUGH THE COURT SYSTEM IS THE KEY!
Thank you for your well written comment, Mike, and I appreciate it. As ironic as it may sound, you’re through the court initiative seems to be taking hold on the west coast while The Morro Bay Commercial Fishermen’s Organization and the Port San Luis Commercial Fishermen’s Organization are suing. The lawsuit asks the court to block state agencies from issuing site survey permits until a statewide plan is developed to protect fisheries from offshore wind development. I really like that and agree. I also believe this administration is destroying our oceans, among other things! Best regards!
Mike – Right you are. But, in all of my years doing odd jobs for commercial fishermen I have seen damn few law suits that end up in the win column (for the industry), and too many where the folks that brought them ran out of money or out of steam. Quite simply, the bucks generally aren’t there. And then again we see “industry” efforts that end up being subsidized by the various gov’t. groups-and there are a bunch of them out there. Back in the 60s/70s that was called (among other things) being co-opted. Find an industry group that is started for all the right reasons, watch that group getting starved for adequate industry funds – and becomes convinced that to win you have to out-bureaucratize the bureaucrats, and then watch it get compromised one way or another by it’s government “partners.”
Wash some of the gurry of a significant number of fishermen and you’re going to see a bunch of frustrated bureaucrat. C’mon, guys!!! When do I get to be president?
One minor comment, but I’d argue this administration is far too interested in selling our oceans than it is in destroying them.
Borehead – Right you are as well – and as usual.
Nils, you have been at this game for a long time my friend. You know the history, and all the garbage that goes with it. I honestly believed that for a long time the government has been looking to our oceans and coastal waters trying to figure out how to eliminate the fishing industry in order to placate their donors who know the potential value of what they see, if they could only get their hands on it.
There’s gold in them there hills is a metaphor for those who look at our coastline, and care nothing about the death and destruction that we all know is coming. Sadly I don’t see any way to stop this, short of civil disobedience and creating unrest where it’s needed. And to do that will require good folks who are willing to risk everything for this just cause.
Playing by their rules is a joke. Always has been and always will be.
The final chapter of this nightmare will have those who are left holding their hands out begging for money from those who had no problem destroying their lives and way of life.
Good luck with that. I hope I’m wrong, but the momentum is not in our favor.
Joel –
Good to hear from you, my friend.
Since the couple of years of hoopla following Magnuson’s passage has the momentum ever been in our favor?
One of the things I find most regrettable about our current abysmally pathetic political situation is that the health of our oceans has been reduced to a political weapon by a bunch of career pols whose interests don’t extend any farther than the next election, and a bunch of voters who are too dim to realize it.
Nils