With over a third of assessed global fish populations overfished and more than half are fished to their sustainable limits, pressure is mounting on governments around the world to step up and reverse this strain on ocean life and ecosystems.
They have a chance to start doing just that when the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization’s Committee on Fisheries (COFI) meets Sept. 5-9 in Rome to address the sustainability challenges facing global fish stocks and how to better oversee industrial, small-scale, and artisanal fishing operations while protecting workers in that subsector.
The latest report from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), released in June, shows that 35.5% of assessed fish stocks are overfished and that more than 57% cannot sustain further increases in fishing. Also, fishing remains one of the world’s most dangerous professions, with inadequate global safety standards in place to keep fishers from injury or death; in fact, no one knows the true human cost of fishing. And the COVID-19 pandemic has forced human observers off boats and limited valuable face-to-face negotiation and discussion opportunities, further reducing the transparency of on-the-water activities and exacerbating some fisheries management challenges.
COFI member governments should take immediate steps to encourage improved oversight of global fishing activities and work to end illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing, which undermines sustainable management. They can do this by:
To improve safety at sea and working conditions for fishers, COFI members should work to ensure systematic collection and sharing of safety and labor-related information—specifically, by adopting more-stringent rules for accident reporting on fishing vessels and creating a global repository of data on fishing-related injury and mortality. Doing so would help governments understand the extent of the issue and, hopefully, how best to address it.
Finally, COFI members should also take action to safeguard marine habitats and ecosystems by:
The COFI meeting agenda is ambitious, but the tenuous status of global fisheries demands that leaders make progress on all of these issues now. Creating a subcommittee on fisheries management, which members should agree to start next year, would provide separate and more frequent opportunities for governments to discuss the full suite of needs to manage fisheries, including the interlinkages with IUU fishing, compliance, fisher safety, and biodiversity. Doing so would both improve discussions at future COFI meetings and, more importantly, better protect the ocean, the life that calls it home, and the livelihoods of the millions of people worldwide who depend on a healthy and sustainable marine environment.
Elaine Young works on The Pew Charitable Trusts’ international fisheries project.