Vessel monitoring systems (VMS) are an essential tool for modern fisheries management. With proper implementation and appropriate sharing of data, these systems can also help detect, deter, and eliminate illegal fishing.
In the 1990s, fisheries managers began trials using satellites to track fishing vessel locations and movements.1 In the years since, advances in technology have made these monitoring systems more sophisticated, though they remain relatively easy to use. Today, regional management bodies, national enforcement agencies, and industry use VMS to keep a watch on vessel activity in most major fisheries around the world. These systems have become a key component in the fight against illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing.
To track movements at sea, a shipboard transponder transmits a vessel’s identity and location (longitude and latitude), and often the course and speed,2 via secure satellite communication and land earth station to relevant authorities—such as its flag state’s fisheries monitoring center (FMC), as well as a ship’s operators or owners. For vessels that stay close to shore, mobile phone technology is increasingly used to transmit the data to the FMC.
Only those authorized can access this information. Typically, that is government officials in relevant flag or coastal states. However, the vessel can also transmit its VMS data directly to or through the flag state or service provider; to other monitoring agencies, such as the secretariat of a regional fisheries management organization (RFMO); or another government. The information should be provided in real or near-real time to be most useful.
VMS can play an important role when tracking vessels fishing in areas beyond their home or flag states’ national waters. When used effectively, these systems enable greater monitoring of fishing vessel activity in sensitive or closed areas, facilitate advance notification to authorities when vessels are approaching port or entering a state’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), and help detect when catch is being transferred from one ship to another at sea (transshipping).
Tracking enables greater analysis of vessel or fleet behavior by time and location, which helps authorities detect suspicious fleet patterns and aids monitoring, control, and surveillance efforts. VMS data also can support development of improved stock assessments. The information can be used by fisheries scientists to corroborate the accuracy of information from other fisheries management tools, such as vessel logbooks, catch records, and observer reports. Combining these capabilities with near-real time access by fisheries managers can eliminate the considerable delays associated with paper reporting methods. It also can greatly reduce the potential for false or intentionally manipulated and inaccurate data. Finally, efforts to trace the origin of fish may also benefit from near-real time VMS data. When that information is matched against fish landings, it can provide detail for the “chain of custody,” and that helps track fisheries products from hook to plate.
The primary costs of a vessel monitoring system include the shipboard transponder, data transmissions, the user interface to view collected data, and the actual monitoring and analysis. However, increasing competition for VMS in the global market has brought down transmission costs. New technologies that allow data to be sent in “packets” have also helped make these systems less expensive.3 In addition, ongoing monitoring is now highly automated, which further reduces costs.
According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization: “The major stumbling block facing effective global deployment of VMS is not technology or cost, it is mainly the will to deploy the systems and the imperative to reach global agreement on system standards and data sharing arrangements.”4
VMS transmissions are secure and governed by strict conditions on how government officials can use the information. Whenever information is shared with another government, additional confidentiality protocols typically must be followed. They include restrictions on network and software access, as well as requirements for data management and processing (including prevention of theft or loss) and communications security.
Most relevant authorities, including flag and coastal states and RFMOs, require the use of VMS on fishing vessels. Many flag states mandate that their own vessels carry VMS within national waters, on the high seas, and in the waters of other states. Some coastal states include VMS in licensing agreements that apply to foreign vessels registered to fish in their waters. Most RFMOs require the use of VMS by large vessels authorized to fish within their convention areas. However, in these cases, the RFMO member flag state has the authority, jurisdiction, and enforcement responsibility for mandating installation and operation of VMS and enforcing reporting obligations.
Some RFMOs have, or are developing, policies to allow for the direct and simultaneous transmission of data from the vessel to the organization’s secretariat and the vessel’s flag state FMC. Others require that data also be sent from the vessel to the secretariat and member coastal states. Centralizing the data in this way provides RFMO members with pertinent information that could be useful in authorized inspection actions, tracking vessels from port to port, and for scientific purposes.
Certain requirements must be in place for VMS to be capable of effectively monitoring compliance with fisheries management measures, both at a national level and in the framework of RFMOs:
VMS is an essential tool for fisheries monitoring and management and increasingly for combating IUU fishing. With the adoption and implementation of effective rules and data-sharing among appropriate authorities, vessel monitoring systems can help to detect, deter, and eliminate illegal fishing in the world’s oceans.