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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Thousands of Sharks, Other Sea Life Mysteriously Die in San Francisco Bay, State Says No Funding Available to Determine Cause
As many as 2,000 leopard sharks have mysteriously died in the San Francisco Bay over the past few months. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife Read More » -
National Marine Fisheries Service to tighten rope rules for lobster fishermen
In 2009, federal regulators set their sights on groundlines that linked lobster traps on the ocean bottom. In 2014, it’s the vertical lines lobstermen use to Read More » -
Yorkshire crab and lobster deaths: Government closes investigation for second time
The North Sea around the Tees Estuary has been affected by the issue as far south as Staithes and Whitby since last autumn, when large numbers of Read More » -
Review of Atlantic halibut survey raises sustainability questions
For more than two decades, Atlantic halibut fishermen have baited their hooks and dropped them to the ocean bottom off Nova Scotia and Newfoundland as part Read More » -
Governor Andrew Cuomo’s Silly War on Natural Gas
Thanks to the shale revolution, the United States is awash in natural gas. Since 2005, domestic gasproduction has nearly doubled, and American companies are now sending Read More » -
Fishermen want larger limit for mackerel – Council wants Catch Shares as a condition
In order to get the increase in trip limits, the fishermen may have to go along with a fishery management practice they have long opposed — Read More » -
Boothville La. man pleads guilty to harassing fisherman
Today, April 11, a Boothville man pled guilty to one count of criminal damage under $500 and one count of harassing a person lawfully fishing in Read More » -
Perhaps this will help today – Shifting to the Other Side
A small shift can make a major difference in the harvest we reap. Peter along with Thomas, Nathanael, James, John and two other disciples decide they Read More » -
Offshore Wind: LIPA Blasted at Meeting
A discussion on Nov. 1 of the proposed South Fork Wind Farm, hosted by the East Hampton Town Trustees’ harbor management committee, was blown off course. Read More » -
Eel fishery hearings in Maine rescheduled
(AP) – The ASMFC is holding hearings from Maine to Georgia that kick off Monday in New Hampshire. The proposed regulations are the result of a Read More » -
In Maine, a key day for elvers regulation
The panel deciding whether to set catch limits or even close the fishery will take comments from fishermen and state officials, and there could be tension. Read More » -
StarKist says it cant do anything about fish prices for the American Samoa longline fleet
StarKist has told the American Samoa longline fleet that while they understand the reasons local boats are not out fishing, they too are facing difficulties in trying Read More » -
East Hampton Candidates Debate Future
The candidates fielded questions on issues ranging from offshore wind and energy sustainability to coastal retreat due to climate change,,, On how the proposed South Fork Read More » -
Bristol Bay Fisheries Report: June 21, 2021
It’s the first Fish Report of the season! Data from Port Moller show a big push of fish might arrive in the Nushagak this week. But Read More » -
A setnetting family on Amook Island – the seasonal migration
Peter’s parents have spent the last 43 seasons salmon fishing here. In a doorway of the old cabin at their site, I can trace Peter’s penciled Read More » -
Retired Commercial Fisherman/Entrepreneur Samuel Asaro of Gloucester, Massachusetts has passed away
Samuel Asaro, 96, of Gloucester, husband of Lousia (Balbo) Asaro, passed away peacefully on July 1st, at Kaplan Family Hospice House, with his loving family by Read More » -
A leaking pipe may have started Alaska Juris demise
Flashlight in hand, a stunned Chief Engineer Eddie Hernandez peered into the darkness to survey the swamped engine room of the Alaska Juris. The cold seawater Read More » -
Brigantine hosts third offshore wind meeting – We don’t want it.
Wind energy companies Ørsted North America and Atlantic Shores have plans to build offshore wind turbines 10 to 15 miles off New Jersey’s shoreline. Atlantic Shores Read More » -
Scallop season is underway
The scallop fishing season got underway in eastern Maine earlier this month and is already making news. In the waters between eastern Penobscot Bay and Cobscook Read More » -
State control of red snapper fisheries creates problems – Tom Marvel, owner/operator, F/V Sea Marvel
Much has been written about the ongoing debate over red snapper, most recently by J. Scott Butherus of the Naples Daily News in July. I would Read More » -
Fisheries science books disposal costs Ottawa thousands
The information comes from the office of Fisheries and Oceans Minister Gail Shea. It was prompted by a request from Liberal MP Lawrence MacAulay last October, Read More » -
North Carolina Fisheries Association Weekly Update for October 17, 2016
Click here to read the Weekly Update, to read all the updates, Click here 18:39 Read More » -
Seal overpopulation is causing controversy! Culling seal to save cods is nonsense- Keeping the Sea Coyote in Check!
It’s a predictable response, replete with arrogance, ignorance, rationalization and insensitivity. Consider: Because the Atlantic cod has declined drastically in numbers and can no longer sustain Read More » -
An unexpected outcome of the Great Bear Rainforest agreement
“Prince Rupert produces some of the most iconic seafood in the world,” Coastal First Nations — an alliance of nine nations on B.C.’s central and north Read More » -
North Star Seafood Inc purveyor to pay $250K for Lacey Act Violations
A Pompano Beach seafood purveyor who federal prosecutors allege conspired to sell live spiny lobsters caught in the Florida Keys to China must pay a $250,000 Read More »
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William O. Brown, here’s one very quick and easy way to allay all of our unreasonable fears regarding seismic testing: don your SCUBA gear or even use one of Dr. Sylvia Earle and her husband’s Deepwater Flight machines (cute little $million dollar subs) and have a dive in the area where they are harmlessly seismic blasting. Then when (or if) you surface, please give us a first-hand scientific report on the effects of the harmless seismic blasting you’ve experienced. OK? Deal?
Did you work for the Oceana and National Geographic non-governmental organizations because they seem to be at some variance with your statements assessing the effects of the blasting on marine life:
http://oceana.org/en/our-work/climate-energy/seismic-airgun-blasting/overview
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/energy/2014/02/140228-atlantic-seismic-whales-mammals/
But Hey, William O. Brown, don’t let that stop your personal experimental dive during blasting. I’m sure you can “clear up” these “few misconceptions” held by National Geographic and Oceana (and anybody who knows and cares anything about the ocean).
I hope that the U.S. Office of Inspector General identified “culture of ethical failure”, MMS, that then changed its name to BOERME, then changed its name to BOEM with enviro chief William Y. Brown, takes note that:
‘Opposition mounts to seismic testing for Atlantic oil and gas reserves’
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The governors of North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia are
among those calling to allow seismic testing to proceed off their
coasts. They appear to have won the support of the Department of
Interior, which in February published an environmental analysis that endorses seismic exploration for an area stretching from Delaware to Florida.
But a growing number of coastal cities and town have passed resolutions opposing seismic testing. They are Cape Canaveral, Fla.; Cocoa Beach, Fla.; Carolina Beach, N.C.; Nags Head, N.C.; Bradley Beach, N.J.; and Red Bank, N.J. In addition, the city of St. Augustine Beach, Fla. voted unanimously to oppose seismic testing and wrote a letter to the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management expressing its opposition, while Caswell Beach, N.C. approved a resolution expressing concern about seismic testing.
Meanwhile, 110 state and local elected officials signed onto a letter
sent this week to President Obama and Interior Secretary Sally Jewell opposing seismic testing. The signatories include mayors, city council members, county commissioners and state lawmakers from Delaware, Florida, Maine, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina and Virginia. Oceana, a conservation advocacy group that’s involved in the fight against seismic testing, expects more local officials to join the opposition in the coming weeks.
“We urge your administration to stop this process and focus on
ensuring the vitality of vulnerable coastal economies along the Atlantic Coast,” the letter stated. “We cannot continue to put our ocean environment, beaches, marine resources, and coastal economies at risk.”
http://www.southernstudies.org/2014/04/opposition-mounts-to-seismic-testing-for-atlantic-.html
It’s too bad Dolphins can’t speak otherwise we’d get an Ear full from the Dolphins that survived the NAVY HIGH POWERED SONAR TESTS.
Mr. Brown has a very interesting and impressive resume….degrees from some very notable and prestigious institutions and working for well known private and public sector (in particular Brookings). No doubt a man who has accomplished much in academia and seems to be well published.
The issue here is that we have the most lawless presidential administration in our countries history and with that, it breeds such mistrust when those within the administration make public comments.
I took note of a letter he wrote to the NY SLIME back in November 2011 – Looking at Obama’s Record on the Environment, as noted the Keystone XL:
“It might be emotionally satisfying for environmental groups to take their marbles from the electoral table. But if their cause seeks outcomes rather than appearances, the right course for them is to fully support the best candidate, whether Democrat or Republican, and to take the current administration to task directly for actions they believe are wrongheaded.”
In fact, it comes down to this current administration under Barry Soetoro having such an disjointed energy policy because of the corruption at the very top starting with the Energy Department in 2009 using taxpayer money to essentially take care of big dollar democratic bundlers and the notable crash and burn failures shortly thereafter on supporting “Solyndra-like” pie in the sky green energy schemes.
Then the influence of the “Wizard of Omaha” a Mr. Buffet who just happened to invest in railroads and freight cars for carrying….crude oil. Great….then he is quoted in a story from US NEWS in 2014:
“Buffet seems to be perfectly fine with receiving tax breaks for making investments in Big Wind. “I will do anything that is basically covered by the law to reduce Berkshire’s tax rate,” Buffet told an audience in Omaha, Nebraska recently. “For example, on wind energy, we get a tax credit if we build a lot of wind farms. That’s the only reason to build them. They don’t make sense without the tax credit.”
Really…….then again its all pillow talk on what you do and say to support the worlds most noted golfer prior to the presidential election, or each and every year on what you tell your stockholders and of course, the public who thought he was a standup regular Joe…..but as noted in this particular story:
“But while the wind production tax credit may be great for Buffet’s bottom line, it’s harmful for American taxpayers and energy consumers.” (how many times have we mentioned this here…anyone out there listening?)
Further in the story:
“If private companies like Berkshire Hathaway are not willing to jump in without government incentives, it is a sign that the energy technology is a bad investment. It simply does not make sense for the government to subsidize energy technologies that are economically unviable, while attempting to restrict other options that provide reliable and affordable energy for everyday Americans.”
So where does this bring us as it concerns this article?
The search for new sources of energy products which we Americans should all support. It is not only critical for the consumers in this country who rely on petroleum products to heat and cool our our homes, but as much for the transportation of food products, delivery of services and of course for the little people like us to get around in our daily lives.
But, there is a more important issue here…. energy independence is so critical in a very dangerous world as our nations national security is being threatened without it.
With an unsettled Middle East because we have something akin to the Bad News Bears on foreign policy, yes our own JV squad made up of a guy whose resume just states, ‘Community Activist’ another guy who is always on the wrong side on policy decisions, Clueless Joe Biden, the guy who likes to hear himself talk, John Kerry, Sergeant Hagel (how about that for our Secretary of Defense), ValJar and we cannot forget CIA Direction John Brennan – read the latest on this guy: Senate Now Mad at CIA Director? How About When He Was a Leaker on National Security? http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2014/08/01/Senate-Now-Mad-at-CIA-Director-How-About-When-He-Was-A-Leaker-on-National-Security ).
With this bunch running the United States, we continue to make mistake after mistake in keeping people somewhat safe around this world (the latest major policy disasters in dealing with Libya, Ukraine, Israel and our border along ‘Mess-ico.’)
We need to continue on finding more fossil fuel energy products, wherever that may be and there will be risks in locating and eventually recovering these products in such remote places like the continental shelf off the east coast.
People in this country are going to have to put the pressure on the politicians to force this administration to come up with a coherent energy policy pretty quickly where fracking, oil recovery within and along the US, and the Keystone XL pipeline can move forward., and with stopping the EPA from killing the coal industry in this country.
William Brown just happens to be a mouthpiece passing along this current administrations just goodness-awful energy policies.
We are reaching the point where the national security interests of this country depend on energy independence and finding as many new productive areas to safely recover fossil fuel products is critical at this time.
As noted in an article in Foreign Policy (an outstanding website for news) from almost two years ago, “Energy Insecurity” Iran and their pursuit of a nuclear bomb, this country is going to have to make those difficult choices due to the increasing deadly instability around the world. (See:
http://shadow.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2012/10/12/energy_insecurity_how_oil _dependence_undermines_america_s
_effort_to_stop_the_irania )
What do we do then when Iran not only has a nuclear weapon and delivery system to dump it somewhere?
The populace in this country has to elect politicians who say “the very standard of living in this country is threatened by the policies from this administration….a COMPETENT change has to be made”
Few want windmills and LNG terminals off their shoreline, or fracking and a pipeline to deliver crude oil from Canada running across our country…or for that matter seismic testing off our coast…but when the lights go out, and the cars and trucks stop running, what next?
How do you think the people in this country will react?
How secure would you feel at that point in your community….around our country?
There are no easy answers here, other then moving in the direction of American energy independence.