Europaudvalget 2011-12
EUU Alm.del Bilag 558
Offentligt
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This report has been prepared with the financial support of the European Commission.
The views expressed in this study are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the
European Commission or of its services.
The content of this report may not be reproduced, or even part thereof, without explicit reference to the source.
POSEIDON, MRAG, COFREPECHE & NFDS, 2012. - Ex-post evaluation of the current Protocol to the
Fisheries Partnership Agreement between the European Union and Republic of Kiribati, and ex-ante
evaluation including an analysis of the impact of the future Protocol on sustainability, Framework contract
MARE/2011/01 - Lot 3, specific contract n°01. Final report: final version, May 2012. Bruxelles, 138 p.
COFREPECHE: 32 rue de Paradis, 75010 Paris, France.
[email protected]
Version: Final Report,
final version
Report ref: KIR95R01E1
Number of pages: 138 (all included)
Date issued: 21 May 2012
Action
Authors
SURNAME
MACFADYEN
First name
Graeme
Organisation
Position
POSEIDON
Director /
Team leader - Fisheries economist
POSEIDON
Director /
Fisheries economist
MRAG
Managing Director /
Senior fisheries expert
POSEIDON
Director
COFREPECHE
Project officers
COFREPECHE
Projects Director
COFREPECHE
Deputy Managing Director
Category
I
BANKS
Richard
I
Peer review
(draft final report)
Proof reading
Edition
Approval
Validation
MEES
Chris
I
HUNTINGTON
PICAULT
LE FOL
DEFAUX
SILVA
Tim
David
Gwendal
Vincent
Jean-Pierre
I
II
I
I
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Acronyms and abbreviations
ACP
ADB
AFAD
AER
ALC
AUS$
B/C
BET
CCM
CCS
CFP
CI
CIF
CMM
CNM
CPPL
African, Caribbean and Pacific
Asian Development Bank
Anchored FAD
Annual Economic Report
Automatic Location Communicator
Australian Dollar
Benefit/cost
Bigeye Tuna
Commission Cooperating Member
Catch Certificate Scheme
Common Fisheries Policy
Conservation International
Carriage Insurance and Freight
ins
INTERCO
IT
IUU
JC
KDP
kg
lb
LDC
MCS
MDGS
MFED
MFMRD
mm
mn
MoU
MPA
MSY
MTC
MTU
MY
NEA
OFP
OPAGAC
ORTHONG
EL
PACP
PAE
PIPA
PNA
PNAO
PNG
PROCFISH
RERF
Inches
International Code of Signals
Information Technology
Illegal, Unregulated or Unreported
Joint Committee
Kiribati Development Plan
Kilogrammes
Pounds
Lesser Developing Country
Monitoring, Control and Surveillance
Millennium Development Goals
Ministry of Finance and Economic
Development
Ministry of Fisheries and Marine
Resources Development
millimeters
million
Memorandum of Understanding
Marine Protected Area
Maximum Sustainable Yield
Minimum Terms and Conditions
Mobilisation Transmission Unit
Management Year
New England Aquarium
Oceanic Fisheries Programme
Organización de Productores Asociados
de Grandes Atuneros Congeladores
Organisation de Producteurs de Thon
Congelé
Pacific ACPs
Party Allowable Effort
Phoenix Islands Protected Area
Parties to the Nauru Agreement
Parties to the Nauru Agreement Office
Papua New Guinea
Pacific Regional Coastal Fisheries
Development Programme
Revenue Equalisation Reserve Fund
Conservation and Management Measures
Commission Non Cooperating Member
Central Pacific Producers Limited
Committee of Representatives of
CRGA
Governments and Administrations
CRISP Coral Reef Initiative for the Pacific
DCF
Data Collection Framework
DCR
Data Collection Regulation
DEVFI The Development of Tuna Fisheries in the
SH
Pacific ACP Countries Project
DFAD
DG
MARE
DWFN
EAFM
EBIT
EC
EDF
EEZ
ENSO
EP
EPA
EPO
Drifting FAD
Directorate General for Maritime Affairs
and Fisheries
Distant Water Fishing Nations
Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries
Management
Earnings Before Interest and Tax
European Commission
European Development Fund
Exclusive Economic Zone
El Niño Southern Oscillation
European Parliament
Economic Partnership Agreement
Eastern Pacific Ocean
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EU
F
FAD
FAME
FAO
FFA
FFC
FMIS
FMSY
FOB
FPA
FSM
FSMA
FTE
GATT
GDP
GSP
HS
HSP
IA
IATTC
IEO
IEPA
IMF
European Union
Fishing mortality
Fish Aggregation Device
Fisheries, Aquaculture and Marine
Ecosystems
Food and Agriculture Organisation
Forum Fisheries Agency
Forum Fisheries Commission
Fisheries Monitoring Information System
Fishing mortality rate that would give
Maximum Sustainable Yield
Free OnBoard
Fisheries Partnership Agreement
Federated States of Micronesia
FSM Arrangement
Full Time Equivalent
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
Gross Domestic Product
Generalised System Of Preferences
High Seas
High Seas Pockets
Implementing Agreement
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission
Insituto Español oceanografico
Interim Economic Partnership Agreement
International Monetary Fund
Regional Fisheries Management
Organisation
RMI
Republic of the Marshall Islands
Scientific Support for the Management
SCICOFISH of Coastal and Oceanic Fisheries in the
Pacific Islands Region
SEAPODY Spatial Ecosystem and Populations
M
Dynamics Model
SIDS
Small island developing states
RFMO
SJK
SMACFish
SOE
SPC
TAE
TCC
TUFMAW
UNICEF
UNFSA
US$
USLMT
VDS
VDSC
VMS
WCP
WCPFC
WCPO
WTO
YFT
Skipjack Tuna
Sustainable Management of Aquaculture
and Coastal Fisheries in the Pacific
Region for Food Security and Small-
scale Livelihoods
State Owned Enterprise
Secretariat of the Pacific Community
Total Allowable Effort
Technical and Science Committee
Tuna Fisheries Database Management
System
United Nations International Children's
Emergency Fund
United Nations Fish Stocks Agreement
United States Dollar
United States Multi-Lateral Treaty
Vessel Day Scheme
Vessel Day Scheme Committee
Vessel Monitoring System
Western Central Pacific
Western Central Pacific Commission
Western Central Pacific Ocean
World Trade Organisation
Yellowfin Tuna
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Currency Exchange Rates used in this report (www.oanda.com)
€1 =
2007
2008
2009
2010
US$
1.35
1.58
1.41
1.22
AUS$
1.59
1.64
1.74
1.44
2011
1.45
1.35
2012
1.34
1.25
Rates are mid-year rates, except for 2012 which is rate at time of writing (Feb/March 2012)
Acknowledgements
The consultants are grateful to all stakeholders who shared their time, thoughts, information and data with the
consulting team which completed this specific contract.
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E
XECUTIVE
S
UMMARY
I
NTRODUCTION
i.
This report provides an ex-post evaluation of the current Protocol to the Fisheries Partnership Agreement
(FPA) between the European Union and the Republic of Kiribati. It also provides an ex-ante evaluation
and analysis of impacts of a potential future Protocol on sustainability. The evaluation covers the period
September 2006 to March 2012. The FPA provides fishing opportunities for EU purse seine and longline
vessels to fish in the waters of Kiribati.
C
OUNTRY BACKGROUND
ii.
Kiribati is a remote Pacific nation made up of 33 widely dispersed islands (21 inhabited) divided into
groups (Gilbert Group, Phoenix Group and the Line Group) that straddle the equator. While the total land
area is only 726 km
2
, the related exclusive economic zone (EEZ) is the largest EEZ of the Pacific islands
countries at 3.55 mn km
2
. Kiribati’s population was 103,280 in 2011 and is almost entirely concentrated in
the Gilbert Islands. At the current population growth rate of 1.25 %, the population is expected to double in
the next 20 years. Kiribati is a sovereign democratic republic within the Commonwealth.
The Kiribati economy faces significant constraints common to other island atoll states. Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) stands at
€109
mn (2010), expanding by an estimated 2-3 % per annum. GDP per capita is
one of the lowest of the Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA) nations at
€1,047
and Kiribati is classified
as a least developed African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) State. Challenges to economic development
include size, remoteness and geographical fragmentation, infertile soils, limited exploitable resources and
an expanding population. A major distinctive feature of national resources is the Revenue Equalisation
Reserve Fund (RERF) with a value of around
€410
mn (in 2011). Initially established from royalties from
phosphate mining, the RERF is used to fund fiscal deficits. The Kiribati Development Plan (KDP) 2008–
2011 builds upon the previous National Development Strategy 2004–2007 with actions to address fiscal
management, population growth, and improved access to international labour markets. While progress in
implementation has been slow, the strategic focus remains: (i) improving the economic environment in the
outer islands, particularly Kiritimati (Christmas Island); (ii) strengthening access to health services; and (iii)
addressing climate change.
Kiribati relies heavily on licence fees from distant water fishing nations (worth an annual average of
€24.4
mn in the period 2009 - 2011) that provide 23-30 % of government revenue and remittances from Kiribati
citizens employed abroad, mainly as seafarers. Fishing is also an important subsistence activity, with over
80 % of households involved in fishing. Fish consumption per capita per year is high by global and Pacific
standards (between 72 kg and 207 kg for the entire country). The fishing sector contributes around 10 %
of GDP. Kiribati has bilateral fisheries arrangements with the European Union, Japan, Taiwan, and the
Republic of Korea, as well as private company agreements with vessels from Ecuador and El Salvador.
Kiribati also receives revenue from a multilateral treaty signed with the United States.
EU relations with the Pacific ACP countries, based on the Lome Conventions and the Cotonou Agreement
have been aimed at supporting stabilisation following decolonisation, while at the same time supporting
economic and social progress. At the regional level the 10th European Development Fund (EDF) (2008-
2013) includes as a priority the sustainable management of natural resources and the environment, with
support to programmes under the Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) and Secretariat of the Pacific
Community (SPC). While Kiribati benefits from regional initiatives, fisheries remain outside the 10th EDF
Country Strategy Paper and National Indicative Programme for Kiribati. Fisheries-specific support is
instead provided through the sectoral policy support component of the FPA. The Kiribati fisheries sector
also benefits from regional initiatives by other donors (notably Australia, New Zealand and the US) and
national support under the Australian-Kiribati Partnership for development.
In September 2004, the EU and 14 Pacific ACP countries, including Kiribati, opened negotiations on an
Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), which should eventually replace the preferential access scheme
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iii.
iv.
v.
vi.
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contained in the Cotonou Agreement that expired at the end of 2007. EPA negotiations are still in
progress. Whilst there is presently no trade in fishery products between Kiribati and the EU, the country
has future aspirations in trading fresh tuna loins.
T
UNA FISHERIES IN
K
IRIBATI AND THE REGION
vii.
The Western and Central Pacific Ocean (WCPO) is the main fishing ground for tunas, accounting for
around 60 % of world catches. Total WCPO tuna catch for 2010 was estimated at 2.28 mn tonnes, with the
purse seine fishery accounting for 80 %, pole-and-line fishing 6.5 %, and longline fishing about 6 %. EU
purse seine vessels account for 2 % of catches in the WCP.
Purse seine fishing expanded rapidly during the 1980s, mainly through the operations of Japanese and US
fleets. More recently the composition of the fleet became more diverse, with an expansion to include other
Asian fishing nations, New Zealand and EU vessels. Vessels predominantly target skipjack tuna (81 % of
the total catch) along with yellowfin (17 %) and bigeye (2 %) and overall dependency on free school fishing
has increased over the years. Access to fishing by distant water purse seine vessels takes the form of
regional or bilateral fisheries partnership arrangements or agreements, including: bilateral
intergovernmental agreements; EU FPAs; commercial agreements between associations or companies;
individual agreements between countries which are Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA); and the US
Tuna Treaty.
The longline fishery catches mainly yellowfin and bigeye tunas, but also albacore, billfish, swordfish and
other species including pelagic and reef sharks. The total number of vessels involved in the tropical
WCPO fisheries has generally been around 3,000. European longliners operate primarily south of 20°S,
outside the tropical area and the EU longline vessels have never fished in Kiribati waters. Together EU
longliners account for less than 1 % of total WCPO longline catches.
The status of the three main tuna stocks exploited in the WCP equatorial area is monitored by the
Scientific Committee installed under the Western Central Pacific Commission (WCPFC) (the tuna Regional
Fisheries Management Organisation (RFMO) for the WCPO). Currently skipjack is being exploited at
moderate levels and overfishing is not occurring, yellowfin is currently fully exploited and there is a 50 %
chance that overfishing is occurring, and recent assessments show that overfishing of bigeye tuna is
currently occurring with present catch levels unlikely to be sustainable.
The key governance and fishery management organisations for tuna and related species in the WCPO,
and the tuna purse seine fisheries in particular include: The WCPFC; The Parties to the Nauru Agreement
(PNA); Regional organisations that provide management services to the WCPFC and the PNA, in
particular the Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) based in Solomon Islands, and the SPC based in New
Caledonia; and the PNA national governments. A number of WCPFC Commission Management Measures
(CMMs) have been formulated in the annual sessions of the Commission. The PNA has also introduced a
Vessel Day Scheme (VDS) for the Management of the Western Purse Seine Fishery, with Party Allowable
Effort (PAE) days allocated to PNA countries, and agreed that a minimum fee of US$5,000 /
€3,450
per
fishing day shall be applied to foreign fishing vessels from 2012 onwards.
Within Kiribati itself, the Kiribati Development Plan focus for fisheries includes maximizing the sustainable
economic benefits from the tuna resource; conserving coastal resources in the face of rising demand for
food and cash incomes; and managing the transition from government research to commercial production
and export. Overriding governance priorities are identified as: maintaining close collaboration with the PNA
and FFA and to obtain maximum sustainable EEZ access fees; promoting public-private partnerships with
reputable foreign investors in catching and onshore domestic processing of tuna; conducting participatory
education programmes with fishers and communities engaged with vulnerable species/stocks; and
ensuring legal sanctions are observed to enforce the conservation regime and prosecute when necessary.
Responsible for this is the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources Development with a staff of 115.
Kiribati has established the Phoenix Islands Protected Area (PIPA) which is one of the largest Marine
Protected Areas (MPAs) in the Pacific at 408,250 km².
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viii.
ix.
x.
xi.
xii.
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E
VALUATION
xiii.
The Protocol provides for 4 purse seine fishing authorisations (1 for France and 3 for Spain), and 12
longline fishing authorisations, evenly split between Portugal and Spain. Apart from two longline fishing
authorisations taken during the first year of the FPA there has been 0 % utilisation of the longline fishing
authorisation possibilities, and no longline catches made during the FPA. On the other hand utilisation of
the 4 purse seine fishing authorisations has been 100 % for each of year of the FPA, and utilisation of
catch possibilities in excess of 100 % each year of the FPA. In 2011 catch utilisation is expected to exceed
200 % of the reference tonnage of 6,400 tonnes for the first time.
Payments made to Kiribati during the FPA have averaged
€1.2
mn per year, with 2/3 paid by the EU and
1/3 by vessel owners. The average payment over 2007 to 2011 was
€3,350
/ US$4,675 a day i.e. close to
the current PNA benchmark price of US$5,000/day.
The covenants and obligations of the FPA and Protocol are generally being complied with by all parties.
However some areas of concern include: the failure of the Joint Committee (JC) meetings to take place
until 2011; the slow payments in recent years for the financial support for the sectoral policy; the failure by
Kiribati to supply inspection certificates and observer reports to shipowners; and the lack of any real
impetus towards joint enterprises or local landings for processing.
The economic analysis of the Protocol shows that ex-vessel fish prices are lower than international
standards, probably due to smaller fish sizes caught in the FAD fishery, but that fish prices have risen by
around 50 % over the period of the evaluation. Given the increasing trend in catches made in Kiribati over
the evaluation period, the landed value of fish caught under the Protocol also shows a rising trend and in
2010 exceeded
€14
million.
A total of
€6.4
mn of value-added is accrued each year when considering the benefits to both the
European Union and Kiribati. 75 % of this accrues to the EU and 25 % to Kiribati. EU value-added is most
prominent in the catching and upstream sectors, and less marked in downstream processing. In Kiribati
value-added is almost entirely focused in the upstream/input sub-sector, principally in the form of
payments made to the Government for access and sectoral support, but also from vessel support services
i.e. transshipment. Some small value-added is made through the employment of Kiribati crew and
observers.
In terms of costs and benefits, for the EU as a whole the Protocol generated an average annual
benefit/cost (B/C) ratio of 4.0, demonstrating that the Protocol provides good value for money with every
€1
invested by the EU and fleet owners generating
€4.0
of benefit in terms of value-added. The cost of
access for vessel owners (€35/tonne) represents 4.1-4.4 % of the average weighted sales prices received
for catches made under the Protocol. Annual average catch values made under the Protocol are
€9.5
mn,
and vessel profits as a proportion of sales revenues range between 11 % and 23 % for the two vessel
classes (84m and 100+m). The benefits to Kiribati were
€1.2
mn per year on average from the EU, plus
smaller benefits in the form of value-added made from port calls by EU vessels and from local crew and
observers onboard EU vessels.
The contribution of catch made under the Protocol to the EU processing sector was small at around 2 % of
loined imports to the EU in 2010, while fish caught under the Protocol and imported to the EU in canned
form represented around 1 % of EU imports of canned tuna in 2010.
The employment generated by the Protocol is estimated at 98 Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) jobs. This
employment generation represents 116 tonnes of fish caught under the Protocol for every job, and
€23,810
of payments by the EU and vessel owners for every one job. Employment creation is divided
roughly equally between the EU and Kiribati. The social clause elements of the Protocol in terms of wage
levels, seamen having contracts, etc., are being fully complied with.
xiv.
xv.
xvi.
xvii.
xviii.
xix.
xx.
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xxi.
xxii.
xxiii.
xxiv.
xxv.
xxvi.
With respect to effectiveness, the EU fleet plays only a small role in terms of overall fleet activity in both
Kiribati and WCP. Its ability to impact on responsible fishing is therefore limited. However some concerns
are noted in relation to responsible fishing in terms of high percentages of catches being comprised of
bigeye tuna (which is assessed as being over-exploited), vessel discards, vessels exceeding high seas
days limits, bycatch of pelagic sharks, and weaknesses in MCS capacity in Kiribati. The Protocol has been
effective in supporting the EU catching sub-sector in particular, but not in creating any joint enterprises or
any significant developments of the Kiribati fish catching or processing sub-sectors, due largely to the
economics of doing so. As noted above, the Protocol has also been effective in creating some
employment in both the EU and Kiribati.
With respect to efficiency, the Protocol has been efficient for the EU in providing access at an affordable
rate for EU vessels owners, and in generating a good benefit/cost ratio of 4.0. But the cost per EU job has
been
€23,810.
For Kiribati, payments made by the EU under the Protocol have represented 4-7 % of
national fishing licence revenue and 1-2 % of total annual government revenues.
The Protocol has significantly contributed to the viability and sustainability of the EU purse seine catching
sub-sector operating in the Pacific and its related employment, but has made no contribution to the
sustainability of the longline sector, and only small contributions to the sustainability of the EU upstream
and processing sub-sectors. The Protocol does not appear to threaten the sustainability of the Kiribati
fishing sector. The Protocol has not however been successful in resulting in any sustainable joint catching
sub-sector operations, or in making any contributions to sustainable Kiribati processing sector operations,
although has contributed to sustainable upstream/vessel support activities.
The EU is a Commission Contracting Member to the WCPFC, and the Protocol is consistent with both the
CFP and WCPFC policies management measures, as well as with the Food and Agriculture
Organisation’s (FAO) Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries, and with the International Labour
Organisation’s Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. There are no inconsistencies in
the Protocol text or its implementation, and EU trade policy. The Protocol is also consistent with national
Kiribati policy and national legislation. Perhaps the key issue of concern in relation to consistency
however, is the fact that the Protocol is a tonnage-based Protocol, with payments for access made per
tonne. National Kiribati policy, in line with evolving regional initiatives, is now strongly in favour of
negotiating and providing access based on vessel days.
All of the above comments mean that the Protocol is relevant to the needs of the EU, and in particular to
its purse seine fleet (although not to the longline fleet). The generation of access fees means the Protocol
is also relevant to the needs of Kiribati. The Protocol does not however satisfy the needs/desires of Kiribati
as expressed to the consultants to have a Protocol which is structured around paying for access based on
vessel days, although this desire has not been formally expressed to the EU. This is explained by the fact
that the VDS was not in place when the Protocol was negotiated, but has evolved in recent years. In
addition, while the Protocol has an objective for the creation of joint enterprises and support for local
processing activity, which satisfies the needs of Kiribati, implementation of the Protocol has not managed
to bring about any such activity or to satisfy these needs and aspirations.
Looking forward to a potential future Protocol, potential new management measures being considered in
the region to improve the management regime (e.g. a one month extension of the Fish Aggregation
Device (FAD) closure, an increase in minimum mesh sizes, closure of the Phoenix Island Protected Area
to fishing, high seas closures around the Kiribati EEZ) would have a negative impact on the activities and
profitability of EU purse seine vessels. Other changes which could have an impact if mandated by the
WCPFC include potential changes in crewing requirements to 10 % and then 20 % being from PNA
countries – this would require changes to the text of the Protocol to ensure coherence, as the text
currently states a minimum of 6 crew on the fleet of purse seiners, which represents around 5 % of current
vessel crew numbers (this figure is exceeded by the EU fleet, with around 9 % of total crew already
sourced from Kiribati).
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xxvii.
It is likely that a future Protocol would generate considerable levels of value-added to both the EU and to
Kiribati, but few changes in employment or the balance of value-added creation between the EU and
Kiribati. It would be in the interest of both the EU and Kiribati to have a new Protocol. For the EU fleet a ‘no
Protocol’ would cause fishing rights as a proportion of sales revenues to rise considerably, while for
Kiribati a failure to sign a new Protocol would eliminate the ear-marked funds for special sectoral support
provided by the EU under the Protocol, and could result in under-utilisation of Kiribati’s PAE days under
the VDS.
R
ECOMMENDATIONS
xxviii.
The recommendations made in this report are necessarily brief, given that it is not the job of the
consultants to present a strategy to the EU for negotiation, but rather to provide the EU negotiators with
the economic data to prepare for the negotiations. Thus the principal recommendation made is to base the
negotiations on the economic and social data provided in this report, and to ensure that there is indeed
signature of a new Protocol.
The ongoing CFP reform also means that there is as yet, not clear direction or guidance on changing the
balance of access payments per tonne between the EU and fleet owners, and the current balance should
therefore be retained.
From a purely technical perspective, this evaluation recommends that the longline fishing opportunities be
removed from the Protocol, given the fact that there have been zero catches made by the longline fleet
under the Protocol. However a final decision on this issue would also need to reflect the political wishes
and agreement by EU Member States.
Given the high level of juvenile bigeye tuna catches taken in the FAD fishery by the EU fleet, the
evaluation also recommends that direct measures should be included in the Protocol (and Annex) to
mitigate against this problem. Such measures should be agreed jointly by all parties, but could include the
use of, and reporting on, FAD management plans.
The levels of payments in a future Protocol, and the basis on which they are paid (e.g. tonnage or vessel
days), will be the subject of negotiation, but should be informed by recent catch levels, rates of utilisation,
and fish prices.
A recommendation is made for greater emphasis and recognition by all parties of the importance of the
Joint Committee meetings. These meetings represent a vital monitoring mechanism for implementation of
the FPA – a mechanism which has historically not been especially effective. The Joint Committee
meetings must be yearly as required in the text of the FPA, and should be used both to review sectoral
policy implementation, and to ensure ongoing compliance with the covenants and obligations laid out in
the FPA and Protocol (and necessary action if such compliance is found to be lacking). Current areas of
weakness in compliance with other covenants and obligations required in the FPA and Protocol should
also be addressed as a matter of urgency.
The evaluation recommends that focus be given to the issue of strengthening MCS capacity in Kiribati. For
example, FPA sectoral funds, and other EU development support, could be used to enhance observer
capacities so as to ensure mutual recognition by WCPFC and Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission
(IATTC) of each other’s observers. The evaluation also recommends greater recognition by EU
development projects of the important nature of the Kiribati FPA, and therefore for the use of funds to
support Kiribati. The view of this evaluation is that there should be a special effort to better align sectoral
policy support provided by the FPA with other EU development aid in a mutually enforcing manner, while
being careful to avoid duplication. This could be supported by the appointment of a fisheries attaché to the
EU Delegation in Fiji, and the EU is believed to be in process of recruiting someone to such a position.
Finally, the evaluation notes the importance of the EU continuing to engage actively with the WCPFC in
efforts to ensure responsible fisheries in the WCPO. As part of this process, given some of the
weaknesses identified in the evolving VDS system, the evaluation recommends that the EU supports the
establishing of target and limit reference points for tuna stocks, so as to ensure the integrity of the scheme
by linking stock status to the management system.
Consortium: COFREPECHE (leader) – MRAG – NFDS – POSEIDON
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Ex-post evaluation of the current protocol to the FPA between the EU and Kiribati, and ex-ante evaluation with analysis of impacts of a future
protocol
Final Report – final version
xxix.
xxx.
xxxi.
xxxii.
xxxiii.
xxxiv.
xxxv.
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R
ÉSUMÉ
I
NTRODUCTION
i.
Ce rapport fournit une évaluation ex-post du protocole de l’Accord de Partenariat dans le secteur de la
Pêche (APP) entre l’Union européenne (UE) et la République de Kiribati (ci-après citée ‘Kiribati’). Il
procure également une évaluation ex-ante et une analyse d’impacts en termes de durabilité d’un possible
futur protocole. L’évaluation couvre la période de septembre 2006 à mars 2012. L’APP garantit des
opportunités de pêche pour les senneurs et les palangriers de l’UE dans les eaux de Kiribati.
C
ONTEXTE DU PAYS
ii.
Kiribati est une nation éloignée du Pacifique, constituée de 33 îles fortement dispersées (dont 21
habitées) divisées en groupes d’îles (îles Gilbert, îles Phénix et îles de la Ligne) et chevauchant
l’équateur. Alors que la superficie des terres émergées est de seulement 726 km
2
, la Zone Économique
Exclusive (ZEE) associée est la plus vaste ZEE des pays insulaires du Pacifique avec 3,55 millions de
km
2
. La population de Kiribati était de 103 280 habitants en 2011 et est presque exclusivement concentrée
dans les Îles Gilbert. Au taux de croissance démographique actuel de 1,25 %, il est prévu que la
population double dans les 20 prochaines années. Kiribati est une république démocratique souveraine
parmi le Commonwealth.
L’économie de Kiribati fait face à des contraintes non négligeables communes à d’autres états atoll. Le
Produit Intérieur Brut (PIB) est de 109 millions d’euros (2010), avec une croissance estimée de 2- 3 % par
an. Le PIB par habitant par an est parmi les plus bas des Parties à l’Accord de Nauru, PAN (en anglais,
PNA) à 1 047
et Kiribati est classé dans les états ACP (Afrique, Caraïbes, Pacifique) les moins
développés. Les contraintes limitant son développement économique incluent la taille de l’archipel,
l’isolement et la fragmentation géographique, l’infertilité des sols, les ressources exploitables limitées et
une population croissante. Un aspect majeur et distinct des ressources nationales est le fonds de réserve
d’égalisation de revenu (en anglais, RERF) ayant une valeur d’environ 410 millions d’euros (en 2011).
Etabli initialement à partir des redevances issues des mines de phosphate, le fonds de réserve RERF est
utilisé pour compenser les déficits fiscaux. Le Plan de Développement de Kiribati 2008-2011 se base sur
la précédente Stratégie de Développement National 2004-2007 avec des actions ciblant la gestion fiscale,
la croissance de la population et un accès amélioré aux marchés du travail internationaux. Alors que la
mise en
œuvre
a été lente, la stratégie reste focalisée sur : (i) améliorer le contexte économique dans les
îles périphériques, particulièrement Kiritimati (île Christmas) ; (ii) renforcer l’accès aux services de santé ;
et (iii) gérer les effets de changement climatique.
Kiribati est fortement dépendante des droits de licences de pêches lointaines d’autres nations (valeur
moyenne de 24,4 millions d’euros dans la période 2009 - 2011) qui procurent 23 – 30 % des recettes de
l’état ainsi que des envois de fonds des citoyens de Kiribati employés à l’étranger, principalement en tant
que marins. La pêche est aussi une activité de subsistance importante, avec plus de 80 % des foyers
impliqués dans le secteur. La consommation annuelle de poisson par habitant est élevée selon les
standards mondiaux et les standards du Pacifique (variant entre 72 kg et 207 kg dans l’ensemble du
pays). Le secteur de la pêche contribue à 10 % du PIB. Kiribati a signé des accords de pêche bilatéraux
avec l’Union Européenne, le Japon, Taiwan, et la République de Corée ainsi que des accords privés avec
des navires venant d’Équateur et du Salvador. Kiribati reçoit aussi des revenus du traité multilatéral signé
avec les États-Unis.
Les relations de l’UE avec les états ACP du Pacifique, basées sur les Conventions de Lomé et les
Accords de Cotonou visent à renforcer la stabilité suite à la décolonisation, tout en favorisant le progrès
économique et social. Au niveau régional le 10ème Fonds Européen de Développement, FED (2008 -
2013) inclut en tant que priorité la gestion durable des ressources naturelles et de l’environnement, avec
l’appui de programmes sous l’égide de l’Agence des Pêches du Forum des îles du Pacifique
(communément nommé par son acronyme anglais FFA) et le Secrétariat Général de la Communautés du
Consortium: COFREPECHE (leader) – MRAG – NFDS – POSEIDON
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Final Report – final version
iii.
iv.
v.
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vi.
Pacifique (SCP). Alors que Kiribati bénéficie d’initiatives régionales, les pêcheries restent exclues du
Document de stratégie et du Programme Indicatif National du 10ème FED. L’appui spécifique aux
pêcheries se fait plutôt à travers de la composante de l’APP d’appui de mise en
œuvre
d’une politique
sectorielle. Le secteur de la pêche de Kiribati bénéficie aussi d’initiatives régionales par d’autres
donateurs (notamment l’Australie, la Nouvelle Zélande et les États-Unis) ainsi qu’un soutien national sous
le Partenariat pour le développement entre l’Australie et Kiribati.
En septembre 2004, l’Union européenne et 14 pays ACP du Pacifique, dont Kiribati, ont ouvert des
négociations sur un Accord de Partenariat Économique, APE, qui devrait à terme remplacer le régime
d’accès préférentiel, ayant expiré à la fin de 2007 et contenu dans l’Accord de Cotonou. Les négociations
sur l’APE sont toujours en cours. Alors qu’il n’y a pas actuellement de transactions de produits de la pêche
entre Kiribati et l’UE, le pays a des aspirations futures portant sur le commerce de longes de thon frais.
L
A PECHE AUX THONS A
K
IRIBATI ET DANS LA REGION
vii.
L’Océan Pacifique occidental et central, OPOC est la zone de pêche principale pour le thon, représentant
autour de 60 % des prises mondiales. La prise totale de thon au sein de l’OPOC pour 2010 a été estimée
à 2,28 millions de tonnes, dont 80 % sont représentés par la pêcherie des thoniers senneurs, 6,5 % par
les canneurs et environ 6 % par les palangriers. Les navires senneurs européens représentent 2 % des
prises dans le Pacifique occidental et central, POC.
La pêche à la senne a connu un essor rapide dans les années 1980, principalement par le biais des
opérations de flottes japonaises et américaines. Plus récemment la composition de la flotte s’est
diversifiée, avec une augmentation, pour inclure d’autres nations de pêche asiatiques, la Nouvelle-
Zélande et les navires européens. Les navires ciblent préférentiellement le listao (81 % de la capture
totale) en parallèle avec l’albacore (17 %) et le thon obèse (2 %) ; la dépendance globale de la pêche sur
banc libre a augmenté au fil des années. L’accès à la pêcherie par des navires de pêche lointaine à la
senne prend la forme d’arrangements ou d’accords de partenariat de pêche régionaux ou bilatéraux,
incluant : des accords bilatéraux intergouvernementaux, des APP avec l’UE, des accords commerciaux
entre associations ou sociétés, des accords individuels entre pays Parties à l’Accord de Nauru (PAN) et le
traité américain portant sur le thon (US
Tuna Treaty).
La pêcherie palangrière capture principalement de l’albacore et du thon obèse, mais aussi du germon, des
poissons à rostre (e.g. espadons) ainsi que d’autres espèces dont des requins pélagiques et de récifs. Le
nombre total de navires impliqués dans les pêcheries tropicales de l’OPOC a généralement été de3 000.
Les palangriers européens opèrent principalement au sud de 20°S, en dehors de la zone tropicale et les
navires palangriers de l’UE n’ont jamais pêché dans les eaux de Kiribati. Ensemble les palangriers
européens représentent moins de 1 % des captures totales à la palangre dans l’OPOC.
L’état des trois principaux stocks exploités dans la zone équatoriale du POC est surveillé par le Comité
Scientifique installé sous la Commission des Pêches du Pacifique occidental et central, CPPOC (en
anglais, WCPFC), organisation de gestion régionale des pêches thonières, ORGP, pour l’OPOC. Le listao
est actuellement exploité à des niveaux modérés sans cas de surpêche. L’albacore est actuellement
exploité pleinement avec une probabilité de 50 % que de la surpêche ait lieu. Des évaluations récentes
montrent que la surpêche de thon obèse est avérée avec des niveaux de capture ayant peu de chance
d’être durables.
Les organisations clés de gestion et de gouvernance pour le thon et les espèces associées au sein de
l’OPOC, et pour les pêcheries à la senne en particulier, comprennent : la CPPOC, les PAN, en particulier
la FFA basée aux Îles Salomon, le SCP basé en Nouvelle Calédonie et les gouvernements nationaux des
PAN. Un certain nombre de Mesures de Gestion de la Commission (Commission
Management Measures,
CMMs) ont été formulées durant les sessions annuelles de la Commission. Les PAN ont aussi présenté
un régime de contrôle par jours de mer par navire,
Vessel Day Scheme
(VDS) pour la gestion des pêches
à la senne du Pacifique ouest, avec des jours d’effort autorisés par partie (Party
Allowable Effort,
PAE)
alloués aux pays PAN, et se sont mises d’accord pour qu’un tarif minimum de 5 000 US$/ 3 450
par jour
de pêche soit appliqué aux navires étrangers à partir de 2012.
Consortium: COFREPECHE (leader) – MRAG – NFDS – POSEIDON
Page xi
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protocol
Final Report – final version
viii.
ix.
x.
xi.
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xii.
À Kiribati même, les éléments centraux du Plan de Développement de Kiribati portant sur la pêche
incluent la maximisation des bénéfices économiques durables issus des ressources thonières, la
conservation des ressources côtières face à la demande croissante en revenus alimentaires et en
espèces, et la gestion de la transition d’une recherche gouvernementale à une production commerciale et
à l’exportation. Les objectifs majeurs de gouvernance sont identifiés comme étant : maintenir une
collaboration étroite avec les PAN et la FFA, obtenir des droits durables d’accès à la Zone d’Exclusivité
Économique (ZEE) à leur niveau maximum, promouvoir des partenariats public-privé pour les captures et
la transformation domestique à terre du thon avec des investisseurs étrangers réputés, animer des
programmes éducationnels participatifs avec des pêcheurs et des communautés engagées dans des
pêches sur des espèces/stocks vulnérables, et s’assurer que des sanctions légales soient appliquées
pour mettre en
œuvre
les mécanismes de conservation, en engageant des poursuites lorsque nécessaire.
Cette responsabilité incombe au Ministère des Pêches et du Développement des Ressources Marines
employant 115 personnes. Kiribati a établi l’Aire Protégée des Îles Phénix (Phoenix
Islands Protected
Area,
PIPA), qui est l’une des Aires Marines Protégées (AMPs) les plus vastes du Pacifique mesurant
408 250 km
2
.
E
VALUATION
xiii.
Le protocole dispense de 4 autorisations de pêches à la senne (1 pour la France et 3 pour l’Espagne), et
12 autorisations de pêche à la palangre partagées équitablement entre le Portugal et l’Espagne. À part
deux autorisations de pêche à la palangre prises durant la première année du protocole, il y a eu 0 %
d’utilisation des possibilités de pêche à la palangre, et aucune capture à la palangre n’a été effectuée
durant le protocole. D’autre part, chaque année du protocole, l’utilisation des 4 autorisations de pêche à la
senne a été de 100 %, et l’utilisation des possibilités de captures en excès de 100 % chaque année du
protocole. En 2011, l’utilisation des captures est prévue de dépasser les 200 % du tonnage de référence
de 6 400 tonnes pour la première fois.
Les paiements effectués auprès de Kiribati durant le protocole ont été en moyenne de 1,2 millions d’euros
par an, dont les 2/3 payés par l’Union européenne (UE) et 1/3 par les armateurs des navires. Le paiement
moyen entre 2007 et 2011 était de 3 350
€/
4 675 US$ par jour, proche du seuil actuel de prix des PAN de
5 000 US$ par jour.
Les engagements et obligations de l’accord et de son protocole ont généralement été respectés par toutes
les parties. Cependant, certains domaines de préoccupation comprennent l’échec de la tenue des
réunions de Commission mixte jusqu’en 2011 ; la lenteur des paiements au cours des dernières années
de l’appui financier à la politique sectorielle ; l’échec de la transmission par Kiribati de certificats
d’inspection et de rapports d’observateurs aux armateurs ; ainsi que l’ absence d’un élan réel vers des
sociétés mixtes ou vers des sites de débarquement locaux pour la transformation.
L’analyse économique du protocole montre que les prix de poissons en sortie navire sont plus bas que les
standards internationaux, probablement en raison des tailles plus faibles de poissons capturés au sein
des pêcheries sur DCPs (Dispositifs de Concentration de Poissons), mais les prix ont augmenté d’environ
50 % durant la période de l’évaluation. Étant donné la tendance à la hausse des captures réalisées à
Kiribati durant la période de l’évaluation, la valeur au débarquement des poissons capturés dans le cadre
de l’APP présente une tendance à la hausse et a dépassé 14 millions d’euros en 2010.
Une valeur ajoutée totale de 6,4 millions d’euros est accumulée chaque année lorsque l’on prend en
compte les bénéfices pour l’Union européenne et pour Kiribati. La valeur ajoutée est plus marquée pour
l’UE en amont dans les secteurs de la capture, et moins marquée en aval de la transformation. À Kiribati
la valeur ajoutée est presque entièrement concentrée dans le sous-secteur en amont, principalement sous
forme de paiements au gouvernement de Kiribati pour l’accès et l’appui sous-sectoriel, mais dans les
services d’appui aux navires, notamment le transbordement. Une petite plus-value est réalisée au travers
de l’emploi d’équipages et d’observateurs de Kiribati.
Consortium: COFREPECHE (leader) – MRAG – NFDS – POSEIDON
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Final Report – final version
xiv.
xv.
xvi.
xvii.
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En termes de coûts et bénéfices pour l’UE dans son ensemble le protocole a généré un ratio moyen
bénéfices/coûts (B/C) de 1:4,6, démontrant que le protocole fournit un bon rapport qualité/prix ; chaque
euro investi par l’UE et les armateurs générant 4,60
de bénéfice en termes de valeur ajoutée. Le coût
d’accès pour les armateurs (35
€/tonne)
représente 4,1 - 4,4 % du prix moyen des ventes à la pesée pour
les captures réalisées sous le protocole. Les valeurs moyennes annuelles des captures réalisées dans le
cadre du protocole sont proches de 9,5 millions d’euros, et les profits pour les navires en tant que
proportion du revenu des ventes sont compris entre 11 % et 23 % pour les deux classes de navires (73 m
et 100+ m). Pour Kiribati, les bénéfices en provenance de l’UE étaient de 1,2 millions d’euros par an en
moyenne, s’y ajoutant des bénéfices plus faibles générés par la plus-value issue des escales portuaires
des navires de l’UE ainsi des équipages locaux et des observateurs à bord des navires de l’UE.
xix.
La contribution des captures réalisées dans le cadre du protocole au secteur de transformation de l’UE a
été faible à environ 2 % d’imports de longes par l’UE en 2010, alors que le poisson capturé dans le cadre
du protocole et importé par l’UE sous forme de conserves a représenté autour de 1 % des imports de
conserves de thons par l’UE en 2010.
xx.
L’emploi généré par le protocole est estimé à 98 emplois en équivalent temps plein. Cette génération
d’emploi représente 116 tonnes de poisson capturés sous le protocole pour chaque emploi et 23 810
en
paiements par l’UE pour chaque emploi. La création d’emploi est divisée approximativement en part égale
entre l’UE et Kiribati. Les clauses sociales du protocole en matière de niveaux de rémunération, de la
nécessité pour les marins d’être sous contrat, etc., ont été complètement respectées.
xxi.
En ce qui concerne l’efficacité, la flotte de l’UE ne joue qu’un petit rôle sur le plan de l’activité de la flotte
totale présente à Kiribati et dans le POC. Sa capacité à influencer une pêche responsable est donc
limitée. Cependant, des préoccupations sont à noter en relation avec la pêche responsable. Elles portent
sur le pourcentage élevé de captures composées de thon obèse (qui est estimé en surexploitation), les
rejets des navires, le navires dépassant le nombre de jours autorisé en haute mer, les captures
accessoires de requins pélagiques, et les faiblesses en capacité de suivi, contrôle et surveillance (SCS)
de Kiribati. Le protocole a été efficace dans son appui au sous-secteur UE des captures en particulier,
mais ne l’a pas été dans la création de sociétés mixtes ou dans le développement significatif des sous-
secteurs de capture ou de transformation de Kiribati, largement pour des raisons de coûts. Ainsi qu’il a été
mentionné précédemment, le protocole a aussi été efficace dans la création de l’emploi tant pour l’UE que
pour Kiribati.
xxii.
S’agissant de l’efficience, le protocole a été utile pour l’UE en fournissant un accès à un coût raisonnable
pour les armateurs des navires de l’UE, et en générant un bon ratio bénéfice/coût de 4,6. Cependant le
coût par emploi de l’UE a été de 23 810
€.
Pour Kiribati, les paiements effectués par l’UE dans le cadre du
protocole ont représenté 4-7 % du revenu national des licences de pêche et 1-2 % du revenu
gouvernemental annuel total.
xxiii.
Le protocole a contribué de manière significative à la viabilité et à la durabilité du sous-secteur des
captures à la senne de l’UE opérant dans le Pacifique et de ses emplois liés, mais il n’a aucunement
contribué à la durabilité du secteur palangrier ; et a contribué faiblement à la durabilité des sous-secteurs
en amont et de transformation de l’UE. Le protocole ne semble pas menacer la durabilité du secteur de la
pêche de Kiribati. Le protocole n’a cependant pas eu de succès dans le développement d’opérations de
captures par des sociétés mixtes, ni en contribuant durablement aux opérations du sous-secteur de la
transformation de Kiribati, bien qu’il ait contribué aux activités durables en amont/de soutien aux navires.
xxiv.
L’UE est une partie contractante de la CPPOC, et le protocole est en cohérence avec à la fois les mesures
de gestion politiques de la Politique Commune des Pêches (PCP) et de la CPPOC, ainsi qu’avec le Code
de Conduite pour des Pêcheries Responsables de la FAO (Food
and Agriculture Organisation),
et avec la
Déclaration de l’Organisation Internationale du Travail sur les Principes Fondamentaux et les Droits au
Travail. Il n’y a pas d’incohérences entre le texte du protocole ou sa mise en
œuvre
et les politiques
commerciales de l’UE. Le protocole est aussi cohérent avec les politiques nationales et les législations
nationales de Kiribati. L’élément-clé de préoccupation au sujet de la cohérence pourrait cependant être
que le protocole est basé sur le tonnage, avec des paiements par accès par tonne. La politique nationale
Consortium: COFREPECHE (leader) – MRAG – NFDS – POSEIDON
Page xiii
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protocol
Final Report – final version
xviii.
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xxv.
xxvi.
xxvii.
de Kiribati, en accord avec des initiatives régionales en évolution, est maintenant fortement en faveur
d’une négociation et de fournir des accès basés sur des jours de mer par navire.
Tous les commentaires précédents signifient que le protocole est pertinent vis-à-vis des besoins de l’UE,
et en particulier de ceux de sa flotte de pêche à la senne (bien que ne l’étant pas pour ceux de la flotte
palangrière). La génération des droits d’accès signifie que le protocole est aussi pertinent aux besoins de
Kiribati. Le protocole ne satisfait cependant pas les besoins/souhaits de Kiribati d’avoir un protocole
structuré autour de paiements par accès basés sur des jours de mer, bien que ce souhait n’ait pas
formellement été exprimé à l’UE. Ceci s’explique par le fait que le VDS n’était pas en place lorsque le
protocole était négocié mais qu’il a évolué dans les récentes années. De plus, alors que le protocole a un
objectif de création de sociétés mixtes et de soutien à l’activité locale de transformation, satisfaisant les
besoins de Kiribati, la mise en
œuvre
du protocole n’a pas réussi à créer de telles activités ou à satisfaire
ces besoins et aspirations.
En se projetant vers un éventuel futur protocole, de nouvelles mesures de gestion potentielles étant
considérées dans la région pour améliorer le mode de gestion (ex : une extension d’un mois de la clôture
des Dispositifs de Concentration de Poissons (DCPs), une augmentation des tailles minimales de
maillage, la fermeture à la pêche de l’Aire Protégée de l’Île Phénix, les fermetures de zones de haute mer
autour de la ZEE de Kiribati) auraient un impact négatif sur les activités et la profitabilité des navires
senneurs de l’UE. D’autres changements qui pourraient avoir un impact si mandatés par la CPPOC
comprennent des changements potentiels dans les exigences d’équipages à 10 % puis 20 % d’origines
des pays PAN – ceci nécessiterait des changements de texte du protocole afin d’assurer sa cohérence,
puisque le texte actuellement cite un minimum de 6 hommes d’équipage dans la flotte de senneurs, ce qui
représente environ 5 % du nombre total de marins à bord (ce chiffre est dépassé par la flotte de l’UE avec
environ 9 % de l’équipage total déjà originaire de Kiribati).
Il est probable que le futur protocole génère des niveaux conséquents de valeur ajoutée à la fois pour l’UE
et Kiribati, mais peu de changements sur l’emploi ou la répartition de la création de valeur ajoutée entre
l’UE et Kiribati. Il serait ainsi dans l’intérêt de l’UE et de Kiribati d’avoir un nouvel protocole. Pour l’UE, un
« non protocole » signifierait une hausse importante des droits de pêche dans le revenus des ventes,
pendant que pour Kiribati l’absence de signature d’un nouveau protocole éliminerait les fonds réservés à
l’appui sectoriel spécial fourni par l’UE sous le protocole et pourrait résulter par une sous-utilisation des
jours de PAE sous le VDS.
R
ECOMMANDATIONS
xxviii.
Les recommandations soumises dans ce rapport sont nécessairement brèves, puisque il n’est pas du rôle
des consultants de présenter une stratégie à l’UE pour la négociation, mais plutôt de fournir à l’UE les
données économiques pour préparer les négociations. C’est pourquoi la recommandation principale est
de baser les négociations sur les données économiques et sociales fournies dans ce rapport afin de
s’assurer qu’il y ait ainsi signature d’un nouveau protocole.
La réforme en cours de la PCP signifie aussi qu’il n’y a pas encore de direction ou d’orientation sur un
changement de ratio de droits d’accès à la tonne entre l’UE et les armateurs, et que le ratio actuel doit
donc être maintenu.
D'un point de vue purement technique, cette évaluation recommande que les possibilités de pêche à la
palangre soient retirées du protocole, compte tenu du fait qu'il n'y ait eu aucune capture effectuées par la
flottille palangrière au titre du protocole. Toutefois, une décision finale sur cette question devra également
tenir compte des souhaits politiques et de l'aval des Etats membres de l'UE.
Compte tenu du niveau élevé de juvéniles de thon obèse capturés dans la pêche sous DCPs par la flotte
de l'UE, l'évaluation recommande également que des mesures directes soient incluses dans le protocole
(et son annexe) afin d'atténuer ce problème. Ces mesures devraient être adoptées conjointement par
toutes les parties, mais pourrait inclure l'utilisation de, et des rapports sur des, plans de gestion des DCPs.
Consortium: COFREPECHE (leader) – MRAG – NFDS – POSEIDON
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xxix.
xxx.
xxxi.
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xxxii.
xxxiii.
xxxiv.
xxxv.
Les niveaux de paiements dans un futur protocole, et la base sur laquelle ils sont payés (ex. tonnage ou
jours de pêche des navires), seront sujets à négociation, mais devront être renseignés des niveaux de
captures récents, des taux d’utilisation et des prix du poisson.
Une recommandation est exprimée pour une plus grande mise en évidence et reconnaissance par toutes
les parties de l’importance des réunions de la commission mixte. Ces réunions représentent un
mécanisme de suivi vital pour la mise en
œuvre
de l’APP – un mécanisme qui n’a pas été historiquement
très efficace. Les réunions de la commission mixte doivent être annuels, tel que requis dans le texte de
l’APP, et devraient être utilisés pour revoir à la fois la mise en
œuvre
des politiques sectorielles et pour
s’assurer du respect des engagements et des obligations détaillées dans l’APP et le protocole (et les
actions nécessaires à un tel respect sont insuffisants). Les zones de faiblesse actuelles dans le respect
des autres engagements et obligations requises dans l’APP et le protocole devraient aussi être traitées en
urgence.
L’évaluation recommande que l’accent soit mis sur le renforcement de la capacité de suivi, contrôle et
surveillance (SCS) à Kiribati. Par exemple, les fonds sectoriels de l’APP, et autres appuis au
développement de l’UE, pourraient être utilisés pour augmenter les capacités d’observation afin d’assurer
une reconnaissance mutuelle des observateurs de la CPPOC et de la Commission Inter-américaine du
thon tropical (CIAT ; en anglais IATTC). L’évaluation recommande aussi une plus grande reconnaissance
par les projets de développement de l’UE de l’importance de l’APP avec Kiribati, et donc pour l’utilisation
des fonds d’appuis à Kiribati. Le point de vue de cette évaluation est qu’il devrait y avoir un effort
particulier pour mieux aligner l’appui à la politique sectorielle fournie dans le cadre de l’APP avec d’autres
projets de développement de l’UE de manière à se renforcer mutuellement tout en prenant garde à éviter
des duplications. Ceci pourrait être appuyé par la nomination d'un attaché à la pêche à la délégation de
l'UE aux îles Fidji, l'UE serait sous le processus de recruter pour pourvoir un tel poste.
Enfin, l’évaluation note l’engagement actif de l’UE à collaborer avec la CPPOC dans le but de garantir des
pêches responsables au sein de l’OPOC. En tant que partie intégrante de ce processus, étant donné
certaines des faiblesses grandissantes identifiées du système VDS en évolution, l’évaluation recommande
que l’UE soutienne l’établissement de points de références cibles et de références limites pour les stocks
de thons afin d’assurer l’intégrité du programme VDS en liant l’état des stocks au système de gestion.
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T
ABLE OF
C
ONTENTS
1
2
INTRODUCTION - PURPOSE AND SCOPE OF THIS EVALUATION................................................. 1
GENERAL BACKGROUND AND SITUATION IN THE PARTNER COUNTRY ................................... 2
2.1
C
OUNTRY BACKGROUND
...................................................................................................................... 2
2.1.1 Geography.................................................................................................................................... 2
2.1.2 Population .................................................................................................................................... 3
2.2
P
OLITICAL
,
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL ISSUES
............................................................................................ 3
2.2.1 Political and institutional aspects.................................................................................................. 3
2.2.2 General economic situation and outlook....................................................................................... 4
2.2.3 National budgetary and social objectives ..................................................................................... 5
2.2.4 Contribution of fisheries to national economy............................................................................... 5
2.2.5 Balance of trade ........................................................................................................................... 6
2.2.6 Employment ................................................................................................................................. 7
2.2.7 Food security................................................................................................................................ 7
2.3
EU
AND
K
IRIBATI RELATIONSHIPS IN THE REGIONAL CONTEXT
.................................................................. 7
2.3.1 EU cooperation strategy ............................................................................................................... 7
2.3.2 10th EDF commitments................................................................................................................ 8
2.3.3 9
th
EDF commitments..................................................................................................................10
2.3.4 Millennium Development Goal Initiative.......................................................................................10
2.3.5 Trade relationships between Kiribati and the EU.........................................................................10
2.4
O
THER DONOR RELATIONS
..................................................................................................................11
3
TUNA FISHERIES IN KIRIBATI AND THE REGION ..........................................................................13
3.1
R
EGIONAL OVERVIEW
.........................................................................................................................13
3.2
T
HE PURSE SEINE FISHERY
..................................................................................................................14
3.2.1 Fleet evolution .............................................................................................................................14
3.2.2 Purse seine catch by species ......................................................................................................15
3.2.3 Purse seine effort ........................................................................................................................17
3.2.4 FAD and free school set dependencies.......................................................................................18
3.3
T
HE
L
ONGLINE FISHERY
......................................................................................................................18
3.3.1 The fleet ......................................................................................................................................18
3.3.2 Longline catch by species ...........................................................................................................19
3.4
S
TATUS OF
F
ISH STOCKS IN THE REGION
..............................................................................................20
3.5
E
COSYSTEM ISSUES ASSOCIATED WITH TUNA FISHERIES
........................................................................22
3.6
M
ANAGEMENT AGREEMENTS IN THE
WCP
AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS
.......................................................24
3.6.1 The Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC) ............................................24
3.6.2 Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA) and related management arrangements........................28
3.6.3 The Palau Arrangement and Vessel Day Scheme (VDS)............................................................33
3.6.4 Niue Treaty..................................................................................................................................38
3.6.5 Regional Organizations (FFA and SPC)......................................................................................39
3.7
T
HE
E
ASTERN
P
ACIFIC
F
ISHERY
: S
TATUS AND
M
ANAGEMENT ISSUES
.....................................................41
3.7.1 Status and management issues ..................................................................................................41
3.7.2 Issues of special concern to vessels fishing under the Kiribati FPA ............................................42
3.8
F
LEETS FISHING IN THE
K
IRIBATI
EEZ ..................................................................................................43
3.8.1 EU purse seine fleet ....................................................................................................................43
3.8.2 EU longline fleet ..........................................................................................................................46
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3.8.3 Non-EU distant water fishing activity in the Kiribati EEZ..............................................................46
3.8.4 Domestic sector...........................................................................................................................50
3.9
F
ISHERIES GOVERNANCE IN
K
IRIBATI
....................................................................................................51
3.9.1 Policy and institutional framework ...............................................................................................51
3.9.2 Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources Development (MFMRD) Budget.............................55
3.9.3 National Fisheries Laws ..............................................................................................................56
3.9.4 Specific national marine protected area measures......................................................................57
3.9.5 Monitoring, control and surveillance ............................................................................................58
3.9.6 Catch certification........................................................................................................................60
4
EX-POST EVALUATION SPECIFIC TO THE PROTOCOL OF THE FISHERIES PARTNERSHIP
AGREEMENT ......................................................................................................................................61
4.1
I
NTRODUCTION TO THE
F
ISHERIES
P
ARTNERSHIP
A
GREEMENT
...............................................................61
4.2
U
TILISATION
.......................................................................................................................................62
4.2.1 Fishing authorisations and uptake of the possibilities negotiated ................................................62
4.2.2 Catches and utilisation of the possibilities negotiated..................................................................63
4.3
C
OSTS OF THE
P
ROTOCOL
..................................................................................................................63
4.4
C
OMPLIANCE WITH THE COVENANTS AND OBLIGATIONS SPECIFIED IN THE
FPA.........................................66
4.5
E
CONOMIC ANALYSIS OF
P
ROTOCOL
....................................................................................................67
4.5.1 Findings and discussion of the economic and financial impacts of the Protocol..........................67
4.6
E
MPLOYMENT ANALYSIS OF THE
P
ROTOCOL
..........................................................................................75
4.7
E
FFECTIVENESS
– T
HE EXTENT TO WHICH THE SPECIFIC
FPA
OBJECTIVES WERE ACHIEVED
.....................77
4.8
E
FFICIENCY
– T
HE EXTENT TO WHICH THE DESIRED EFFECTS WERE ACHIEVED AT A REASONABLE COST
.....79
4.9
S
USTAINABILITY
– T
HE EXTENT TO WHICH POSITIVE
/
NEGATIVE EFFECTS ARE LIKELY TO LAST AFTER THE
FPA
HAS TERMINATED
.................................................................................................................................80
4.10 C
ONSISTENCY
– T
HE EXTENT TO WHICH POSITIVE
/
NEGATIVE SPILL
-
OVER ONTO OTHER ECONOMIC
,
SOCIAL
OR ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AREAS ARE BEING MAXIMISED
/
MINIMISED
............................................................82
4.11 R
ELEVANCE
– T
HE EXTENT TO WHICH THE
FPA’
S OBJECTIVES WERE PERTINENT TO THE NEEDS
,
PROBLEMS
AND ISSUES FACED BY STAKEHOLDERS
..........................................................................................................83
5
5.1
5.2
5.3
6
ANALYSIS OF IMPACTS AND EX-ANTE EVALUATION OF A FUTURE PROTOCOL OF THE
FISHERIES PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT........................................................................................85
S
TAKEHOLDERS TO A FUTURE PROTOCOL AND THEIR VIEWS
...................................................................85
S
ECTORAL POLICY DEVELOPMENT
........................................................................................................86
E
X
-
ANTE EVALUATION CRITERIA
...........................................................................................................89
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS....................................................................................92
6.1
C
ONCLUSIONS
...................................................................................................................................92
6.2
R
ECOMMENDATIONS
...........................................................................................................................94
APPENDICES
A
PPENDIX
A: R
EFERENCES
......................................................................................................................................................................96
A
PPENDIX
B: P
ERSONS CONSULTED
........................................................................................................................................................102
A
PPENDIX
C: C
OMPLIANCE WITH KEY COVENANTS AND OBLIGATIONS IN THE
A
GREEMENT
, P
ROTOCOL AND
A
NNEX
......................................104
A
PPENDIX
D: C
OSTS AND
E
ARNINGS MODELS FOR
84
M AND
100+
M
EU
PURSE SEINE VESSELS UTILISING FISHING POSSIBILITIES PROVIDED BY
THE
P
ROTOCOL
............................................................................................................................................................................113
A
PPENDIX
E: M
ETHODOLOGY USED IN THIS EVALUATION
..........................................................................................................................114
A
PPENDIX
F: P
URSE SEINE CATCHES IN THE
WCPO
BY NATIONALITY
, 2006
TO
2010 (
TONNES
) .................................................................116
A
PPENDIX
G: L
ONGLINE CATCHES IN THE
WCPO
BY NATIONALITY
, 2006
TO
2010 (
TONNES
)......................................................................117
A
PPENDIX
H: P
URSE SEINE AND LONGLINE CATCHES IN
K
IRIBATI
EEZ
BY NATIONALITY
, 2007
TO
2010 (
TONNES
) ........................................118
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protocol
Final Report – final version
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Figures, Tables and Boxes
Figures
F
IGURE
1: K
IRIBATI
E
XCLUSIVE
E
CONOMIC
Z
ONE
.........................................................................................................................................2
F
IGURE
2: W
ORLD TUNA CATCH
, 2008-2010 (
TONNES
)..............................................................................................................................13
F
IGURE
3: D
ISTRIBUTION OF CATCHES OF TUNAS IN THE
WCP
AREA BY GEAR OVER THE
2000-2009
PERIOD
,
AND
2010................................14
F
IGURE
4: T
RENDS IN ANNUAL EFFORT
(
DAYS AT SEA
)
FOR THE TOP FOUR PURSE SEINE FLEETS
, FSMA/
DOMESTIC AND OTHERS OPERATING IN
THE TROPICAL
WCP, 2001–2010 ...................................................................................................................................................17
F
IGURE
5: D
ISTRIBUTION OF CUMULATIVE
WCPFC
YELLOWFIN TUNA CATCH FROM
2000-2009
BY
5
DEGREE SQUARES OF LATITUDE AND
LONGITUDE AND FISHING GEAR
;.......................................................................................................................................................21
F
IGURE
6: P
ERCENTAGE COMPOSITION OF THE
20
MAIN SPECIES CAUGHT BY UNASSOCIATED
,
LOG
-
DRIFTING
FAD
AND ANCHORED
FAD
PURSE
-
SEINE SETS
(
BY WEIGHT
)
IN THE
WCP–CA
DETERMINED FROM RECENT OBSERVER DATA
(2001–2006). .............................................23
F
IGURE
7: WCPFC H
IGH
S
EA POCKETS
....................................................................................................................................................27
F
IGURE
8: M
EAN DISTRIBUTION OF SKIPJACK LARVAE
, 1
ST
QUARTER FOR THE DECADE
1990-1999................................................................28
F
IGURE
9: DWFN / FSMA
AND
D
OMESTIC
P
URSE SEINE EFFORT BY
PNA
LICENSED PURSE SEINE FLEET
.....................................................35
F
IGURE
10: M
ONTHLY CATCHES BY
EU
PURSE SEINE VESSELS FOR
2010
BY SPECIES
(
TONNES
) ..................................................................44
F
IGURE
11: F
ISHERIES
D
IVISION ORGANISATION CHART
..............................................................................................................................54
F
IGURE
12: A
VERAGE MONTHLY IMPORT PRICES PAID BY
B
ANGKOK CANNERIES FOR PURSE SEINE CAUGHT FISH
(E
URO
/
TONNE
, 2006
TO
J
ULY
2011)............................................................................................................................................................................................68
F
IGURE
13: A
NNUAL VALUE OF CATCHES MADE IN
K
IRIBATI
EEZ
BY
EU
VESSELS UNDER THE
P
ROTOCOL
(E
UROS
)........................................69
Tables
T
ABLE
1: K
IRIBATI
G
ROSS
D
OMESTIC
P
RODUCT BY
E
CONOMIC
A
CTIVITY AT
C
ONSTANT
2006 P
RICES
, 2007–09 (€
MNS
).................................6
T
ABLE
2: B
ALANCE OF EXTERNAL TRADE
(€,
MN
)..........................................................................................................................................6
T
ABLE
3: B
REAKDOWN OF PURSE SEINE DISTANT WATER VESSELS
(EEZ
AND HIGH SEAS
)
FISHING IN THE
W
ESTERN
P
ACIFIC
, 31 J
UNE
2010
AND AT THREE PRIOR TIMES IN THE FISHERY
.....................................................................................................................................15
T
ABLE
4: P
URSE SEINE CATCH
(
TONNES
)
BY TROPICAL TUNA SPECIES IN
WCPO, 2010................................................................................16
T
ABLE
5: PNA
CATCH BY SET TYPE
(
AVERAGE
2005-2009) ........................................................................................................................18
T
ABLE
6: L
ONGLINE CATCHES IN THE
WCPO,
TONNES
, 2010. ....................................................................................................................20
T
ABLE
7: WCPFC
MEASURES RELEVANT TO THE FISHERIES UNDER ASSESSMENT
........................................................................................25
T
ABLE
8: PNA VDS
ALLOCATIONS
,
UPTAKE BY MANAGEMENT YEAR
(2008-2011)
AND TRANSFERS
...............................................................36
T
ABLE
9: I
MPLEMENTATION OF
PAE A
LLOCATIONS BY
PNA
MEMBERS AT
F
EBRUARY
2011 ..........................................................................37
T
ABLE
10: S
TRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES OF THE
VDS .............................................................................................................................37
T
ABLE
11: EU
ZONAL PURSE SEINE CATCHES IN THE
WCPO (EEZ
AND
HS) 2007-2010 .............................................................................43
T
ABLE
12: EU
PURSE SEINE SPECIES CATCH IN THE
WCPO (EEZ
AND
HS) 2006-2011. .............................................................................44
T
ABLE
13: EU
PURSE SEINE FISHING DAYS BY ZONE
(2007-2010) ..............................................................................................................45
T
ABLE
14: C
ATCH STATISTICS FOR
EU
FLEET IN
K
IRIBATI PROVIDED BY DIFFERENT MANAGEMENT ORGANISATIONS
(2007-2010) ...................45
T
ABLE
15: EU
CATCH BY
K
IRIBATI ZONE
(2007-2010)................................................................................................................................46
T
ABLE
16: C
ATCHES OF TUNA
(
TONNES
)
BY
DWFN
AND
FSMA
PURSE SEINE AND LONGLINE VESSELS IN THE
K
IRIBATI
EEZ .........................47
T
ABLE
17: S
UMMARY OF FOREIGN VESSELS LICENSED TO FISH IN
K
IRIBATI WATERS
, 2011 ...........................................................................48
T
ABLE
18: E
STIMATES OF ANNUAL AVERAGE LICENCE REVENUES ACCRUED TO
K
IRIBATI IN THE PERIOD
2009-2011.......................................49
T
ABLE
19: U
SE OF
K
IRIBATI
PAE
DAYS
, 2007
TO
2010..............................................................................................................................50
T
ABLE
20: MFMRD E
XPENDITURE
F
RAMEWORK
, 2011
AND
2012 (AUS$
AND
€)
.......................................................................................55
T
ABLE
21: M
ARINE
P
ROTECTED
A
REAS IN
K
IRIBATI
....................................................................................................................................57
T
ABLE
22: U
TILISATION OF FISHING AUTHORISATIONS PROVIDED FOR IN THE
P
ROTOCOL
..............................................................................62
T
ABLE
23: U
TILISATION OF CATCH POSSIBILITIES PROVIDED FOR IN THE
P
ROTOCOL
.....................................................................................63
T
ABLE
24: P
AYMENTS MADE TO
K
IRIBATI BY THE
EU
AND FLEET OWNERS
....................................................................................................65
T
ABLE
25: P
AYMENTS MADE TO
K
IRIBATI PER TONNE OF FISH AND PER DAY
, 2007-2010..............................................................................66
T
ABLE
26: C
ARRIAGE
I
NSURANCE AND
F
REIGHT
(CIF)
PRICES PAID FOR FISH CAUGHT BY
EU
PURSE SEINERS FISHING UNDER THE
P
ROTOCOL
.....................................................................................................................................................................................................67
T
ABLE
27: A
VERAGE YEARLY IMPORT PRICES PAID BY
B
ANGKOK CANNERIES FOR PURSE SEINE CAUGHT FISH
(E
URO
/
TONNE
).........................68
T
ABLE
28: A
VERAGE YEARLY EX
-
VESSEL PRICES
(€/
TONNE
) .......................................................................................................................68
T
ABLE
29: A
VERAGE ANNUAL VALUE ADDED ACCRUING TO THE
EU
AND TO
K
IRIBATI FROM THE
P
ROTOCOL
...................................................70
T
ABLE
30: B
ALANCE OF VALUE
-
ADDED BETWEEN SUB
-
SECTORS
,
AND BETWEEN THE
EU
AND
K
IRIBATI
..........................................................72
T
ABLE
31: A
VERAGE ANNUAL COSTS AND BENEFITS
(€)
OF THE
P
ROTOCOL
(2007
TO
2011) ........................................................................73
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T
ABLE
32: EU
IMPORTS OF CANNED AND LOINED TUNA AND ESTIMATED CONTRIBUTIONS OF CATCH MADE UNDER THE
P
ROTOCOL TO
EU
IMPORTS
........................................................................................................................................................................................74
T
ABLE
33: E
MPLOYMENT GENERATED BY THE
P
ROTOCOL
...........................................................................................................................76
T
ABLE
34: E
X
-
ANTE EVALUATION OF THE RENEWAL OF THE
EU/K
IRIBATI
P
ROTOCOL
....................................................................................89
B
OXES
B
OX
1: S
UMMARY OF FISHERIES PROGRAMMES COVERED UNDER THE
10
TH
EDF............................................................................................9
B
OX
2: F
ISHERIES
P
ERFORMANCE
I
NCENTIVE
F
UND
(A
US
A
ID
, 2010-2011) ................................................................................................12
B
OX
3: C
ONTENTS OF THE
N
AURU
A
GREEMENT
.........................................................................................................................................29
B
OX
4: T
HE
H
ARMONISED
M
INIMUM
T
ERMS AND
C
ONDITIONS FOR
F
OREIGN
F
ISHING
V
ESSEL
A
CCESS
.........................................................32
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1
INTRODUCTION - PURPOSE AND SCOPE OF THIS EVALUATION
This evaluation provides a retrospective ex-post evaluation for the existing Protocol to the Fisheries
Partnership Agreement (FPA) between the EU and the Republic of Kiribati (hereafter, Kiribati)
1
. The evaluation
considers the Protocol in terms of its relevance, coherence, effectiveness, efficiency and sustainability. It also
provides a prospective analysis of impacts and ex-ante evaluation of a future Protocol, in order to provide
sufficient data and information for the negotiation and implementation of a new Protocol.
The framework and scope of the evaluation are influenced by the Terms of Reference provided to the
consultants, the Council Decision of 19
th
July 2004 on Fisheries Partnership Agreements (COM (2002) 637
final), the Specific Methodological Guidelines for Evaluation of Fisheries Partnership Agreements (Oceanic
Developpement & Megapesca Lda, 2008), and the European Commission Impact Assessment Guidelines
(2009). The period of the Protocol evaluated in this report is from 16
th
September 2006 until March 2012.
According to the Article 27(4) of the Financial Regulation and Article 21 of its Implementing Rules, Commission
Services have to ensure that the spending activities they manage are subject of an ex-post and/or ex-ante
evaluation in terms of the human and financial resources allocated and the results obtained in order to verify
consistency with the objectives set. These evaluations must be proportionate to the resources mobilised for,
and the impact of, the programme and activity concerned. The Commission requires the evaluation and
analysis of impacts to support its focus on improving the quality and coherence of the policy development
process.
Before the Commission begins negotiating a new Protocol with Kiribati, it requires:
Factual information and an analysis of the general situation in Kiribati and its fishing sector, covering
the economic, financial, political, institutional, social and environmental aspects, and likely
developments in the short and medium term;
A cost-benefit analysis for the European stakeholders, as regards both the conditions of access to the
waters and resources for the European distant-water fleet, fishing authorisations and other elements
provided for or to be provided for in the Protocol; and
A cost-benefit analysis of a Protocol, and assess its impact on Kiribati, at the political, institutional,
economic, financial, social and environmental levels.
This report presents information collected from various sources, including various Directorate Generals of the
European Commission (EC), the Western Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC), the Parties to the
Nauru Agreement Office (PNAO), the Oceanic Fisheries Programme (OFP) of the Secretariat of the Pacific
Community (SPC), the Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) and the professional association groupings of European
Union (EU) shipowners, Organización de Productores Asociados de Grandes Atuneros Congeladores
(OPAGAC) and Organisation de Producteurs de Thon Congelé (ORTHONGEL), concerned with the utilisation
of fishing possibilities. It also includes the findings of a mission in Kiribati that took place between 26
th
January
and 5
th
February 2012 during which discussions were held with Kiribati stakeholders (government authorities,
private sector).
Throughout this report when referring to the ‘FPA’ we refer to the FPA, Protocol, and Annex. And when referring specifically to the
‘Protocol’ we refer to both the Protocol and the Annex.
1
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2
2.1
2.1.1
GENERAL BACKGROUND AND SITUATION IN THE PARTNER COUNTRY
Country background
Geography
Kiribati is a remote Pacific nation made up of a large number of widely dispersed islands that straddle the
equator (Figure 1). The country is made up of 33 islands, 21 of which are inhabited with a total land area of
some 811 km
2
. The related exclusive economic zone (EEZ) is equal in size to the continental United States
and at 3.55 mn km
2
is the largest EEZ of the Pacific islands countries, lying within the tropical tuna range
bounded by 20°N and 20°S. The islands are divided into three widely spread groups; the Gilbert Group, the
Phoenix Group and the Line Group.
Figure 1: Kiribati Exclusive Economic Zone
Source:
http://www.seaaroundus.org/eez/296.aspx.
The Gilbert Islands (or Tungaru Group) is a chain of 11 atolls and five other islands which have no lagoon but
are of similar origin. Often considered alongside this chain is the isolated island of Banaba, a raised atoll
reaching a height of some 81 meters similar to Nauru, and the only “high” island in the country. The Phoenix
Islands include three atolls and five other islands with fringing reefs. There are also at least two other
submerged reef structures (Winslow and Carondelet) which have no associated islands. The Line Islands in
the east fall into a northern and southern group. The northern group includes the island of Teraina and the
atolls of Tabuaeran and Kiritimati (Christmas Island). The southern Line Islands are mostly uninhabited and
include the atoll of Millennium Island (formerly Caroline Island) and three other islands with fringing reefs, as
well as at least one other submerged reef with no associated island. The total land area is only 726 km
2
, of
which over half (388 km
2
) is on Kiritimati (Christmas Island).
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The capital (Tarawa) on South Tarawa is over 2,000 km to the west of Kiritimati. The islands are very low-lying
with few places being more than two meters above sea level. This makes them particularly vulnerable to rises
in sea level and also to pollution, unsustainable depletion of the underground water resources, and coastal
erosion brought about by both man-made and external factors. The predominant climatic influence comes from
the southeast trade winds which create a pronounced windward side to the reefs. The western islands are
generally wetter, while the Line Islands lie in the dry equatorial zone. Rainfall is also significantly higher in all
areas during El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events. Although tidal ranges tend to be low (less than 2
meters at spring tides) there is variation in sea level through the year (10-20 cm variation in mean monthly
levels) which can increase by up to 40 cm during El Niño years. The atolls comprise a diversity of habitats,
including channels, lagoon reefs and shallow reef flats as well as reef slope environments. There is a clear
difference between windward and leeward sides, with the windward (eastern) sides typically having a
continuous reef margin, narrow reef flat and well developed islands. The leeward reefs are typically much
wider, but in some places show a more gradual slope with a less developed reef flat, often submerged at low
tide.
2.1.2
Population
Kiribati’s population was 103,280 in 2011, with an annual population growth rate of 1.25 %
2
. At the current rate
of growth, the population is expected to double in the next 20 years.
The population is almost entirely concentrated in the Gilbert Islands. The combination of high population
growth and lack of employment on the outer islands is causing the population to drift to Tarawa, the capital.
About 43.6 % of the population live on South Tarawa and the population density (2,558 people per square km)
is high, especially on the islet of Betio. Rapid urban population growth, overcrowding and unsustainable
development are taking their toll, particularly in South Tarawa - there are serious problems with potable water,
sewerage and waste disposal, coastal erosion, over-fishing of coastal resources and health issues.
The Phoenix Islands are largely uninhabited, in the main because freshwater is not always available. Just over
3,000 people live on Kiritimati. 58 % of the population of Kiribati is under the age of 24. A major part of the
young population has no skills or employment. 98.8 % are primarily Micronesians and speak a common local
language, with Asian and European minority populations the remainder. English is the official government
language.
2.2
2.2.1
Political, economic and social issues
Political and institutional aspects
Kiribati is a democratic republic within the Commonwealth. The constitution promulgated at independence
establishes Kiribati as a sovereign democratic republic and guarantees the fundamental rights of its citizens.
The President is both the head of state and the head of government, and is elected by members of the
parliament known as the Maneabani Maungatabu. The Maneabani Maungatabu is a 46-member unicameral
parliament. After each general election, the new Maneaba nominates at least three but not more than four of
its members to stand as candidates for president, locally referred to as "His Excellency Te Beretitenti." The
voting public then elects the president from among these candidates. A cabinet of up to 10 members is
appointed by the president from among the members of the Maneaba.
2
National Statistics Office estimate
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Although popularly elected, the president can be deposed by a majority vote in the Maneaba. In this case, a
new election for President must be held. A person can serve as president for only three terms, irrespective of
term duration.
The President appoints the cabinet, which comprises the President, Vice-President, Attorney-General and no
more than 10 ministers.
Presidential elections were held on 13 January 2012. Anote Tong of the ruling Boutokaante Koaua (Supporting
the Truth Party) was re-elected for a third term as President of the Republic of Kiribati, winning with an overall
margin of almost 42 %. A new Fisheries Minister, Tinian Reiher was appointed on 20th January 2012. The
Fisheries Minister is a member of the ruling party, and a former Fisheries Secretary.
2.2.2
General economic situation and outlook
Kiribati's economy faces significant constraints common to other island atoll states. These include its small
size, remoteness and geographical fragmentation, a harsh natural environment with infertile soils, limited
exploitable resources, and the need to create jobs and promote growth for an expanding population. Kiribati is
classified as a least developed ACP State under Annex 6 of the Cotonou Agreement. There is little potential
for agricultural development, and limited fresh water supplies. Low-lying atolls are threatened by any
substantial rise in sea levels. There is minimal manufacturing sector activity and agriculture is predominantly
subsistence in nature. The major commercial activity is the harvesting of coconuts for domestic consumption
and for the export of copra and coconut oil. The main source of formal employment is the public sector.
Notwithstanding the limited range of economic assets, Kiribati has largely had a solid record of financial
stability since independence in 1979. Governments have traditionally adopted a cautious approach to
domestic spending combined with a deliberate policy of accumulating offshore investments. A major distinctive
feature of national resources is the Revenue Equalisation Reserve Fund (RERF), initially established from
royalties from mining the Banaba phosphate deposits. The RERF has a value of around AUS$554 mn/
410
mn (2011) and is used to fund the annual fiscal deficit. However, it recently suffered from exposure to failed
Icelandic banks and the continuation of a high level of draw-downs to fund the budget deficit and distressed
State-Owned Enterprise (SOE) reforms (Asian Development Bank [ADB] Pacific Economic Monitor Feb 2011).
Concern has been raised as to the long term sustainability of the fund, and it has become even more urgent
that the government constrain expenditures to a level in line with revenue. Privatisation of financially
distressed SOEs is underway and these reforms are likely to create space for private sector development,
reduce SOE’s drain on the budget, and improve the government’s future financial position.
The Kiribati Gross Domestic Product (GDP) stands at AUS$147 mn /
€109
mn (Table 1), expanding by an
estimated 2-3 % per annum (IMF, 2011). GDP per capita is one of the lowest of the PNA nations at US$1,518 /
€1,047
(World Bank, 2011), and compares to GDP figures for Federated States of Micronesia of US$2,883 /
€1,988,
Rep Marshall Islands US$2,587 /
€1,784,
Papua New Guinea US$1,383 /
€954,
and Solomon Islands
US$1,261 /
€870.
GDP growth is likely to be higher in 2012 as large donor-funded infrastructure development
programmes commence. These include the upgrading of international airports in Tarawa and Kiritimati,
upgrading of the South Tarawa Road, and the extension of Betio Port. Inflation was estimated at 2.5 % in
2011.
According to analysis carried out by the International Monetary Fund (IMF, 2011), key externally financed
infrastructure projects are expected to spur growth over the next few years. The main challenge is to manage
the investment boom underway without creating inflationary pressures. Risks to future economic growth are
mainly external and relate to higher inflation pressures from a further escalation of international fuel and food
prices and a stalled global recovery that would hit Kiribati’s remittances and wealth funds. These are balanced
by the potentially faster rebound in domestic demand driven by large public investments in the pipeline.
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2.2.3
National budgetary and social objectives
The Government endorsed the Kiribati Development Plan (KDP) 2008–2011 , prepared by Ministry of Finance
and Economic Development (MFED) in April 2008, which specified actions to address the core weaknesses of
fiscal management, addressing population growth, and improved access to international labour markets (to
promote invisible earnings from national workers abroad). The KDP also builds upon the previous National
Development Strategy 2004–2007, which had guided the previous strategic focus on (i) improving the
economic environment in the outer islands, particularly Kiritimati Island (Christmas Island); (ii) strengthening
access to health services throughout the country; and (iii) addressing climate change.
The Government’s progress in implementing its development priorities has been slow, due in part to capacity
limitations but also to lack of financial and skilled human resources (ADB, 2009).
2.2.4
Contribution of fisheries to national economy
Kiribati relies heavily on licence fees from distant water fishing nations and remittances from Kiribati citizens
employed abroad, mainly as seafarers. The contribution of the fishing sector to the real GDP is around 10 %.
Kiribati, like other FFA members, also receives revenue from a multilateral treaty signed with the United
States. It has bilateral fisheries arrangements with the European Union, Japan, Taiwan, and the Republic of
Korea, as well as some specific private company agreements with vessels operating from Latin America
(Ecuador and El Salvador).
These licenses produced AUS$30 mn /
17.2 mn in 2009, AUS$41.7 mn /
€28.9
mn in 2010 and AUS$26.9
mn /
€19.9
mn in 2011 (Ministry of Finance, 2011). Variations in revenue are usually in response to El Niño
events. There is a strong relationship between higher stock abundance/availability and environmental
conditions in the eastern region (Langley
et al.,
2008).
Revenues from fishing licences traditionally provide between 23-30 % of Kiribati’s government revenue (IMF,
2011).
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Table 1: Kiribati Gross Domestic Product by Economic Activity at Constant 2006 Prices, 2007–09
(€mns)
Agriculture
Fishing
Seaweed
Mining and Quarrying
Manufacturing
Electricity, Gas & Water Supply
Construction
Wholesale & Retail trade
Hotel &Restaurants
Transport and Storage
Communications
Financial Intermediation
Real Estate
Owner Occupied Dwellings
Business Services
Public Administration and Defence
Education
Health
Other Community, Social & Personal Services
Less Imputed Bank Service Charges
Plus Taxes on Products
Less Subsidies
% fishing
Source: IMF.
2007
13.1
8.7
0.1
0.1
4.9
0.3
1.9
4.7
0.8
3.8
4.3
6.4
1.7
8.7
0.8
16.7
7.0
3.0
1.5
-3.6
12.3
-5.1
91.9
9.4%
2008
12.9
8.5
0.1
0.0
4.8
0.3
1.3
4.8
0.7
3.6
4.2
6.2
1.7
8.7
0.7
16.8
7.2
3.2
1.3
-3.5
9.3
-4.6
88.2
9.7%
2009
12.4
8.2
0.1
0.0
4.3
0.3
1.4
4.5
0.7
3.1
4.1
5.8
1.7
8.3
0.7
14.8
6.8
2.7
1.3
-3.3
7.4
-2.5
82.6
10.0%
2.2.5
Balance of trade
Copra has historically been the leading export earner, but has now fallen to fairly low levels (less than AUS$1
mn /
€740,000
per year). Fish product exports are very small and include shark fins and seaweed, but not
tuna, and there are no exports of fish products to the EU.
Table 2: Balance of external trade (
, mn)
2007
Total exports
7.04
Of which are fishery
products
0.38
Total imports
44.03
Balance of trade
-37.04
Source: IMF, 2011.
2008
5.24
0.24
44.94
-39.70
2009
3.62
0.34
38.28
34.66
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2.2.6
Employment
The labour force comprises 37,000, 20,000 of whom are male, and the remaining 17,000 female. Fishing is
also an important subsistence activity, and an estimated 80 % of households either make a living or survive
through some involvement with fishing (IMF, 2011).
2.2.7
Food security
Fish and taro cooked in coconut cream, is the staple diet in Kiribati. According to the latest statistics published
by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO, 2011) on the food balance sheet of fish and fisheries
products, consumption of such products in Kiribati is high by both global and Pacific standards (between 72 kg
and 207 kg for the entire country). The FAO food security indicator reports an undernourishment rate of 5 %,
with dietary deficiency of 5,420 persons. Fish is an important component of the diet as it is estimated to cover
more than 85 % of animal protein consumption and 30 % of total protein consumption (UNICEF, 2008). All
fisheries products consumed in Kiribati are derived from artisanal and subsistence fishing. There are no
organised landings of tuna into the islands, but lower quality tunas or purse seine bycatch may be traded on
occasions to islanders or the recognised SOE, Central Pacific Producers Limited (CPPL), which has four retail
outlets on Tarawa. This practice is fairly common during transshipments from purse seiners to carrier vessels.
2.3
EU and Kiribati relationships in the regional context
This section considers DG DevCo support to Kiribati. In addition to the support outlined below, revenues from
the FPA are drawn from the No 4 Development Account to support fisheries structural and policy development
initiatives. The sectoral support programme under the FPA focuses on supporting a number of projects.
Additional comment is provided in later evaluation sections of the report.
2.3.1
EU cooperation strategy
The EU relations with the Pacific ACP countries are structured, and have been so for decades, first on the
basis of the Lome Conventions, and now by the Cotonou Agreement (EC, 2008). In political terms an
important objective for the EU has been to underpin a successful stabilisation following decolonisation, while at
the same time supporting economic and social progress. Considering the political volatility experienced in a
number of Pacific ACP countries, the EU considers that this goal has not yet been convincingly attained (EC,
2006), and that a concerted effort needs to be made to accelerate progress to achieving the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) (EC, 2010).
In 2006, the EU tabled a proposal for a strengthened partnership with the Pacific islands (document COM
(2006) 248) further adopted by the Council. The strategy proposed consists of three components:
Strengthened relationship between the EU and ACP Pacific States and region, to pursue a broad
political dialogue mostly with and through the Pacific islands Forum, but also at national level with key
Pacific ACP countries in accordance with the provisions of the Cotonou Agreement;
More focused development action on three priorities: governance, regional integration and sustainable
management of natural resources. Fisheries is seen as a sector with great potential for cooperation,
including promotion of sustainable utilisation of resources and of good governance practices; and
More efficient aid delivery: facilitation of donor coordination; a more efficient and effective cooperation
with the smallest countries; and increased use of budget support, are the three axis identified by the
EU.
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In a resolution adopted in February 2007 (document P6_TA (2007) 0022), the European Parliament (EP)
welcomed the initiative of the EU to develop the first EU integrated strategy for the Pacific after 30 years of
cooperation. The EP emphasises the potentially positive role of fisheries in the development of the Pacific
islands and supports the initiative of the EU to support monitoring, control and surveillance (MCS) and fight
against illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. Interestingly, the EP has encouraged the EU to
negotiate any future tuna agreements with the entire region, rather than with individual States, given the high
degree of regional integration of fishery management functions adopted by Pacific island Countries.
The 2010 revision to the Contonou Agreement (Article 23a: Fisheries) (EC 2010, ibid) also stresses the
importance of the development and implementation of fisheries development strategies and management
plans, the mainstreaming of fisheries into national and regional development strategies, the development of
infrastructure and technical know-how to enable ACP countries to achieve maximum sustainable value from
their fisheries, capacity building of ACP countries to overcome external challenges that hinder them from
taking full advantage of their fisheries resources, and the promotion and development of joint ventures for
investment in the fisheries sector of ACP countries. It is also stated that any fishery Agreement that may be
negotiated between the EU and ACP States shall pay due consideration to the consistency with the ACP
development strategies.
2.3.2
10th EDF commitments
At Kiribati level
The Country Strategy Paper and National Indicative Programme concluded between the EU and the Republic
of Kiribati (Kiribati/EU 10th EDF), for the period covered by the 10th EDF (2008-2013) focuses on sectoral
policy programmes for water sanitation and renewable energy (€10.8 mn), as well as an additional component
(€1.9 mn) for a non-focal ‘technical cooperation facility’. Fisheries remain outside the 10th EDF programme for
Kiribati, with the reliance for fisheries specific support interventions being the sectoral policy support
component of the FPA
3
. The remaining support under the 10th EDF (€1.1 mn) (The B-envelope) is allocated
for unforeseen needs.
Under the 11
th
EDF, the EU is considering support for the development of Christmas Island.
At Regional level
At the regional level, the two main priorities under the 10th EDF 2008-2013 are detailed in the Regional
Strategy Paper and the Regional Indicative Programme approved by the EU and the 15 ACP Pacific States,
which include Solomon Islands, Micronesia and Kiribati (Pacific region – EU, 10th EDF (2008)). They are:
Regional economic integration:
€45
mn available for development of human resources, key industries
and trade capacity, trade arrangements and integration into the world economy. Regional integration
is seen as a way of bringing stability and development to the Pacific islands; and
Sustainable management of natural resources and the environment:
€50
mn to support measures to
help low-lying atolls respond to rising sea-levels, protect biodiversity and support fishery development.
The later includes
inter alia
initiatives to promote greater regional integration of fishery management,
increase the efficiency and competitiveness of the local tuna processing industries, strengthen the
region capacities to fight IUU fishing, including stock assessment and the development of the MCS
strategy. These are encompassed by three programmes:
o
The Development of Tuna Fisheries in the Pacific ACP Countries Project (DevFish II, 2008), an
€8.2
mn programme managed by FFA in collaboration with the South Pacific Commission (SPC);
Article 7(2) of the Agreement (the Community’s financial support for promoting responsible fishing and the sustainable exploitation
of fisheries resources in Kiribati waters)
3
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o
Scientific Support for the Management of Coastal and Oceanic Fisheries in the Pacific islands
Region (SciCOFish, 2008), a
€9
mn programme managed the Oceanic Fisheries Programme of
the South Pacific Commission in collaboration with FFA ; and
o
Sustainable Management of Aquaculture and Coastal Fisheries in the Pacific Region for Food
Security and Small-scale Livelihoods (SMACFish, 2008), a
€10
mn programme managed by the
Coastal Fisheries Programme of SPC.
A brief synopsis of these programmes is summarised in Box 1.
Box 1: Summary of fisheries programmes covered under the 10
th
EDF
DEVFISH II:
Focuses on support in development in national fisheries management plans; strengthening industry
associations and artisanal fishers' representation in decision making; providing training and advice on fishing
access agreements and licenses to national government staff; providing support to the EU-approved ‘Competent
Authority’ to certify fish exports so as to meet EU export standards, and to comply with the IUU catch certification
standards; to implement regional strategies, such as strengthening regional MCS capacity, supported by an
coordination centre and training and technical assistance in each country - this also includes legislative reviews,
providing advice for the implementation of FAO’s Port State Measures, and supporting feasibility studies trialling
new technologies, and planning for the acquisition of new enforcement asset; supporting regional integration of
surveillance operations through strengthening of an electronic system for monitoring and surveillance of vessels
at sea; and facilitating information exchange between national agencies and other surveillance partners such as
the US, Australia, New Zealand and France.
SciCOFish:
Focuses on: the strengthening of SPC’s scientific capacity by strengthening observer training
systems; extending the Tuna Fisheries Database Management System (TUFMAN) data base to all countries;
improving the quality of bio-economic and ecosystem modelling to support stock assessments of all tuna, tuna
like species and sharks; support to tuna tagging; developing management advice; and developing local capacity
for implementing field monitoring protocols.
SMACFish:
Focuses on: supporting coastal marine resource management through institutional strengthening
and co-management; developing community based awareness training; reviewing vulnerability to long term
climate change; and developing appropriate marine-based and other alternative livelihood programmes.
Source: EDF Concept notes.
In addition, there is an ACP Fish2 project, coordinated from Brussels, which commenced activities in 2010.
This project provides technical support to ACP fisheries administrations. Kiribati is not eligible under ACP Fish
II component 1 (policy/legal instruments) and 2 (MCS and enforcement) however because they benefit from a
FPA
4
.
To date, aside from multilateral components of the EDF support programme, there has not been any specific
support from these EDF funds allocated to support Kiribati
5
. This is perhaps surprising given the importance
and high utilisation of the FPA as discussed later in this report, and may in part be explained by a lack of
sufficiently robust engagement by Kiribati in the regional organisations managing fisheries-related EDF funds
i.e. FFA and SPC.
DEVCO decided that countries having signed a FPA with the EU should not be supported by ACP Fish II under components 1 and
2 (except through a regional program). This was not foreseen in the ACP FISH 2 project document and is specific to ACP Fish II.
The same countries were not excluded from the previous EC-funded SFP programme for instance (Strengthening Fishery Products
Health Conditions in ACP/OCT Countries).
4
5
Director MFMRD, Pers. Comm., January, 2012
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2.3.3
9
th
EDF commitments
Under the 9th EDF (2003-3007), the following projects were funded to support strengthening of fisheries
management, including research and control:
Pacific Regional Coastal Fisheries Development Programme (PROCFISH) signed with SPC (€10.2
mn), with a focus on management of certain coastal fisheries and oceanic fisheries, and with an
extension (CoFISH,
€2
mn) to cover ACP States not included under PROCFISH;
Development of Tuna fisheries in the Pacific ACP countries (DEVFISH) signed with FFA (€3 mn in
total) with a focus on development of locally based tuna industries, training to fisheries access
negotiation, and support to fishery policy development in certain Pacific countries; and
Scientific support to Oceanic Fishery Management in the WCP area (SCICOFISH) signed with SPC
(€6.5 mn) with a focus on improvement of scientific advice (data collection, stock assessment) and
pilot projects on control of fishing activities (e.g. use of modern technology, including satellite-based
technology to detect IUU fishing).
SPC has supported high level research into stock assessment and management, providing the basis
for the fishery management decisions that exist to date;
FFA provides multinational support in capacity building across a range of management areas:
licensing, statistics, observer training and MCS.
Millennium Development Goal Initiative
Kiribati benefited from these in the following ways:
2.3.4
Under the EC-funded MDGS Initiative, Kiribati has been allocated
€4.2
mn. These funds, which must be
committed during 2012 and will probably be spent over the next three years, are to be used for water and
sanitation improvements on Kiritimati (Christmas Island), subject to the government presenting the project prior
to commitment of funds by the EU.
2.3.5
Trade relationships between Kiribati and the EU
In September 2004, the EU and 14 Pacific ACP countries, including Kiribati, opened negotiations on an
Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), which should eventually replace the preferential access scheme
contained in the Cotonou Agreement that expired at the end of 2007. These negotiations target an ambitious
and development-oriented arrangement, which should promote regional integration and economic
development, policy reform, and sustainable management of resources, such as fisheries, and thus also help
to reduce poverty. EPA negotiations entered a crucial phase during 2007, as the deadline jointly set by the
ACP and EU in the Cotonou Agreement was approaching. Under time pressure, negotiations focused on
preserving ACP market access and complying with the parameters for a World Trade Organisation (WTO)
compatible free trade area (as per Article XXIV of General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)). Papua
New Guinea (PNG) was anxious to avoid trade disruption with the EU as of 1 January 2008 and to benefit from
preferential tariffs as has historically been the case for canned tuna (HS code 1604) and new favourable rules
of origin for canned tuna offered by the EU in such context, and signed the Interim Economic Partnership
Agreement (EU/IEPA, 2008). Fiji also initialled the Interim EPA, however it has not so far ratified it. So far, this
agreement has not been implemented by any other Pacific ACPs (PACPs). Negotiations for a comprehensive
EPA with all PACP countries are still in progress.
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Under existing rules, without the EPA, the six Pacific Least Developed Countries (LDCs) of the PACS,
including Kiribati, fall back on the “everything but arms” preferential access to the EU market provided under
the EU Generalised System of Preferences, although this is a unilateral and not a contractual arrangement
and does not contain improved EPA rules of origin for processed fishery products. The other eight non-LDC
PACPs, whose goods exports to the EU are relatively limited at present, are eligible for the EU’s Generalised
System of Preferences (GSP) tariff reductions. So whilst the thrust towards regional economic integration of
the PACPs has been accelerated by the IEPA initialled with Papua New Guinea and more recently Fiji, a
regional Agreement still remains outstanding. Among the reasons for the delay is that the smallest PACPs are
now seeking to expand the rules of origin concessions to include semi-processed seafood products, mainly
fresh tuna loins (HS 0304 and 0305).
Both the PACPs and the EU remain committed to building a long-term partnership and concluding a
comprehensive EPA supportive of development and regional integration.
Whilst there is presently no trade in fishery products between Kiribati and the EU, the country has some future
aspirations in trading fresh tuna loins to the EU market, linked to a new joint venture arrangement in Tarawa,
Kiribati Fish Limited, which is seeking to establish a loining operation linked to the Chinese longline fleet
operations. So far, Kiribati is not among countries entitled to export fishery products to the EU as it is non-
complying with the EU IUU and sanitary legislations.
2.4
Other donor relations
The EDF support notwithstanding, most donor support in the PACP fisheries sector is provided at the
multilateral level, including institutional strengthening programmes (by Australia and New Zealand); aerial
surveillance and surface patrol capacity to combat IUU fishing (by Australia, New Zealand, France, and USA);
and various fisheries development projects (by Japan). These budgets are in some cases substantial; for
example, to address IUU fishing issues Australia is expected to devote up to
€330
mn to the on-going Pacific
patrol boat project.
Kiribati is receiving support from the Australian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade for support to develop
human resource and workforce skills. This is a facility available to all national government administrations, and
includes fisheries training support to the PNA Crewing Agency agreed to be based in Tarawa (approximately
$5mn /
€3.4
mn, over 5 years), and support to develop the first ever Pacific purse seine training curriculum
which is being trialled in Kiribati
6
.
Kiribati has also received support from the Australian-Kiribati Partnership for development, and Australian Aid
funded an AUS$1 mn /
€0.74
mn ‘Fisheries Performance Incentive Fund’ to strengthen the fisheries
administration to generate more revenue for government and new fishery legislation (see Box 2 for further
details). The programme was for two years, 2010-2011. The fund comprised four milestones, each supported
by AU$250,000 /
€185,185.
6
PNA policy is to promote crewing (10%) on all Distant Water Fishing Vessels operating in the Pacific
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Box 2: Fisheries Performance Incentive Fund (Aus Aid, 2010-2011)
Milestone 1: Legislative Drafting – Fisheries Act and Regulations
Amending the Fisheries Act to include changes in Offences and Penalties under the Fisheries Ordinance,
including coastal fisheries-related offences and penalties and to make provision for offences and penalties that
are effective deterrents in modern commercial fishing.
Milestone 2: Review of Access and other Cooperative Arrangements
Independent review of access, licensing, joint venture and other cooperative arrangements, including those for
coastal fisheries and potential targets for revenue generation. The review took into account implementation of
obligations under the Parties to the Nauru Agreement Vessel Day Scheme and the Western and Central Pacific
Fisheries Commission. The milestone will be complete when a review is presented to the Minister and the
Cabinet, and the Government provides a response to the recommendations.
Milestone 3: Development of Policy, Operational Guidelines
Development of clear policy and operational guidelines and procedures for administration of access and licensing
and joint venture arrangements by the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources Development (MFMRD).
Milestone 4: MoU between Police Maritime Unit and MFMRD
Understanding between MFMRD and Police Maritime Unit on the operation of Kiribati fisheries monitoring,
control and surveillance, including targets for active patrol days and other performance measures and the
potential establishment of a government fund for costs associated with fisheries monitoring and surveillance.
Source: Aus Aid, 2011.
The United States Pacific Development Fund, a component of the US Multi-Lateral Agreement, also provides
development assistance. This is used to support the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources Development
(MFMRD) development budget.
Non-fisheries sector support activity was provided in 2011 by Australia (AUS$28 mn /
€20.7
mn), Taiwan
(AUS$11 mn /
€8.1
mn), New Zealand (AUS$6 mn /
€4.4
mn), the World Bank (AUS$4 mn /
€3
mn), and the
Asian Development Bank. These donors support projects with a focus on wider fiscal and institutional support
(human resource management, governance, health, education and law enforcement), urban development and
addressing the issue of rural deprivation.
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3
3.1
TUNA FISHERIES IN KIRIBATI AND THE REGION
Regional overview
World catches of the three major tuna species (skipjack, yellowfin and bigeye) for all types of gears combined
totaled over 4 mn tonnes on average per year over the 2008-2010 period. The Western and Central Pacific
Ocean is the main fishing ground for tunas, accounting for 57 % of world catches on average, ahead of the
Indian Ocean (21 %), the Eastern Pacific (14 %) and the Atlantic Ocean (8 %) (Figure 2).
Figure 2: World tuna catch, 2008-2010 (tonnes)
Source: WCPFC
7
, IATTC, IOTC and ICCAT annual reports.
The total WCPO tuna catch for 2010 was estimated at 2.28 mn tonnes, slightly lower than the highest ever
annual catch in 2009 at 2.37 mn tonnes. During 2010, the purse seine fishery accounted for an estimated 1.82
mn tonnes (80 % of the total catch), with pole-and-line fishing taking an estimated 150,000 tonnes (6.5 %), the
longline fishery an estimated 135,000 tonnes (6 %), with the remainder taken by coastal handline, ring net,
and troll fishing methods. These latter catches are mostly taken in eastern Indonesia, the Philippines and
Japan. The WCP tuna catch (2.28 mn tonnes) for 2010 represented 82 % of the total Pacific Ocean catch of
2.8 mn tonnes. Figure 3 presents the distribution of catches in the WCP area. Most of the WCP tuna fisheries
are concentrated in the tropical area bound by 20°N and 20°S. SPC data show that the waters under the
jurisdiction of PNA account for 76 % of the overall tropical tuna catch of the equatorial purse-seine fleet in the
WCP, and 22 % of the yellowfin/bigeye longline fleet. The latter catches 44 % in the WCPO High Seas (HS)
zones, and the remaining 44 % from other non PNA zones.
7
Data from WCPFC extracted from SPC ‘catch by EEZ for distribution, SPC, Nov, 2011’.
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Figure 3: Distribution of catches of tunas in the WCP area by gear over the 2000-2009 period, and 2010.
Source: Tuna Fishery Yearbook, 2010.
The following sections review the two main fisheries in which EU operators have some interests, namely the
purse seine fishery and the longline fishery.
3.2
3.2.1
The purse seine fishery
Fleet evolution
The purse seine fishery of the Western Central Pacific evolved from a series of trials largely sponsored by the
Japanese during the late 1960s and early 1970s (Gillett, 2007). The purse seine technique evolved from other
regional fisheries, namely eastern Pacific and off Japan, but faced particular development problems in the
Pacific because of characteristically clear water and a deep thermocline in the equatorial Pacific which created
unfavorable conditions for purse-seining – the tuna schools tend to be smaller, faster-moving, and diving
deeper than those in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. By the late 1970s there were several fully commercial
Japanese and American purse seine operations in the western equatorial area of the Pacific islands. The
number of purse seine vessels operating in the Pacific islands increased rapidly during the early 1980s. The
USA purse seine fleet moved in quickly from the eastern Pacific, due partly to the very strong El Niño event of
1982–83 and partly in response to pressure to reduce dolphin mortality in their traditional fishing grounds. In
1983, 62 USA seiners caught 179,000 tonnes of tuna in the Pacific islands area. During the period from the
mid-1980s to 2003, the regional purse seine fleet expanded, albeit at a slower rate, and the national
composition of the fleet became more diverse (Table 3), with an expansion to include other Asian fishing
nations, firstly Taiwan, Korea, and the Philippines, followed by China and New Zealand. The EU, along with
Latin American vessels from El Salvador and Ecuador, beneficially owned in Spain, represent a more recent
group of entrants to the fishery. Access for all groups of vessels takes the form of regional or bilateral fisheries
partnership arrangements or agreements, including:
Bilateral intergovernmental agreements between individual fishing states and individual PNA Parties;
European Union FPAs (between the EU, and Solomon Islands, Kiribati and Federated States of
Micronesia (FSM));
An assortment of commercial agreements between associations or companies and individual PNA
Parties; and
The US Treaty (between the Governments of certain Pacific States and the USA).
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Pacific island countries have also sought to promote investment in their countries by encouraging reflagging,
chartering, joint ventures or similar arrangements between Island states and foreign investors. This has led to
growth in Pacific island fishing capacity, with agreed access to PNA EEZs through the FSM Arrangement
8
.
Table 3 below highlights the evolution of the different purse seine fleet groupings.
Table 3: Breakdown of purse seine distant water vessels (EEZ and high seas) fishing in the Western
Pacific, 31 June 2010 and at three prior times in the fishery
Country grouping
1988
1995
2003
2010
Korea
23
30
27
28
Taiwan
1
42
38
39
Japan
39
35
34
36
New Zealand
0
0
4
4
Vanuatu
0
2
15
5
China
0
0
4
12
Philippines
9
13
22
22
Spain (EU)
0
0
1
4
Ecuador
0
0
0
7
El Salvador
0
0
0
2
Indonesia
3
0
0
0
Other (now non active)
8
0
2
0
Total DWFN
83
122
147
159
FSMA
4
12
24
36
Domestic to Pacific islands
n/a
n/a
n/a
37
Total DWFN FSMA and
119
177
191
232
Domestic
USLMT
32
43
20
36
Source: Gillett, 2007 and updated from PNAO vessel records, 2010. Note: Indonesian industrial purse seiners (>30 GT)
are excluded from the above table, but are reported at 18 vessels fishing within the Indonesian EEZ. DWFN: Distant
Water Fishing Nations; FSMA Federated States of Micronesia FPA; USLMT: United States Multi-Lateral Treaty.
3.2.2
Purse seine catch by species
The WCPO 2010 purse-seine catch of 1.8 mn tonnes (Williams
et al.,
2011) was the third highest on record for
this fishery, at 80,000 tonnes lower than the record attained in 2009. The majority of the historic WCP purse
seine catch has come from the four main distant-water fleets (see Table 4). Additional data for other years is
provided in Appendix F.
8
The
FSM Arrangement was developed as a mechanism for domestic vessels of the PNA to access the fishing resources of other parties. It came
in force in 1995. Signatories are Kiribati, Federated States of Micronesia, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Palau, Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands.
The FSM Arrangement aims to: provide access for Domestic Vessels to parties’ waters on terms no less favourable than those granted to distant
water fishing nations; secure maximum sustainable economic benefits from tuna resources; promote greater participation by nationals of Parties in
fisheries and assist in development of national fisheries industries; and allow access to vessels on terms consistent with the Palau Arrangement.
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Table 4: Purse seine catch (tonnes) by tropical tuna species in WCPO, 2010.
Japan
Korea
USA
Taiwan
Early DWFN entrants
China
European Union
El Salvador
New Zealand
Recent post 2000 DWFN
entrants
FSM
Kiribati
Rep Marshall Is
Papua New Guinea
Solomon Is
Tuvalu
FSMA and domestic
Vanuatu
Philippines
Indonesia
Other Pacific
Grand total
Source: SPC, 2011.
Yellowfin
38,544
58,314
25,686
29,203
151,747
10,513
4,890
707
765
16,875
2,673
4,686
7,028
48,174
4,212
1,996
68,769
2,452
39,789
20,670
62,911
300,302
Bigeye
2,679
2,972
4,251
3,437
13,339
948
6,666
1,203
131
8,948
380
3,593
1,546
4,473
546
99
10,637
237
3,722
6,201
10,160
43,084
Skipjack
200,011
216,026
215,587
166,211
797,835
42,255
26,363
5,461
23,615
97,694
19,395
23,153
47,387
149,780
8,207
8,459
256,381
21,031
123,679
179,826
324,536
1,476,446
Total
Per cent
241,233
13%
277,312
15%
245,524
13%
198,851
11%
962,920
53%
53,716
3%
37,919
2%
7,371
24,511
123,517
22,448
31,432
55,961
202,427
12,965
10,554
335,787
23,720
167,190
206,697
397,607
1,819,831
0%
1%
7%
1%
2%
3%
11%
1%
1%
18%
1%
9%
11%
22%
100%
These groups are divided into the following:
The early entrants:
Taiwan, Japan, USA and Korea, which numbered 95 vessels in 1988, but which
have gradually increased vessel numbers to 139 vessels in 2010. This group of vessels caught 53 %
of the total catch in 2010 (almost 1 mn tonnes). Fourteen of the US vessels are beneficially owned in
Taiwan;
Vessels from Pacific islands fleets:
These totalled 54 vessels in 2010, with a catch of 336,000 tonnes,
or 18 % of the total. PNG represents the largest contingent of this fleet. Vessels from this group are
divided into two groups, domestic (21) allowing access to only respective national flag EEZs and their
archipelagic waters, and PNG FSMA vessels (33 vessels). The ownership structure within the FSMA
group of vessels comprises predominantly Taiwanese and some other foreign beneficial owners
including 1 Spanish owned vessel in Kiribati. Non-FSMA vessels, defined as ‘domestic’ vessels are
registered in the Solomon Islands, PNG, FSM, and two in Kiribati. These are owned by a combination
of foreign and domestic owners, but in most cases, fishing activities directly support domestic
investments in the onshore processing and servicing sectors.
New distant-water entrants:
This group includes the European Union (Spain), New Zealand and
China, as well as a more recent increase of vessels from Ecuador and El Salvador. This group of
vessels was not present in the Pacific before 2000. Catches are now collectively around 124,000
tonnes (7 % of the total). The Latin vessels (Spain and South America) fish in both the Western and
Eastern Pacific Ocean.
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Other Pacific:
Philippines and Vanuatu, as well as a number of Indonesian vessels. The Vanuatu fleet
comprises vessels chartered through Vanuatu but beneficially owned in Taiwan, and these vessels
fish through bilateral arrangements with specific countries. Filipino vessels fish both inside their own
EEZ, as well as through specific bilateral arrangements, whilst Indonesian vessels (18 in number) fish
inside their EEZ and in Indonesian archipelagic waters.
It is noteworthy from the above table that the fleets predominantly target skipjack (Katsuwonus
pelamis),
accounting for 81 % of the total catch. However, yellowfin tuna (Thunnus
albacares),
accounting for 17 %, may
be caught in large numbers. The other target species, bigeye tuna (Thunnus
obesus),
accounts for 2 % of the
total catch and is often caught in large numbers when using Fish Aggregation Devices (FADs). The EU fleet,
which is particularly reliant of FADs, has a much higher dependency on bigeye tuna (18 %) than the other
fleets.
3.2.3
Purse seine effort
Figure 4 below summarizes the historic levels of purse seine effort by the major countries/groups in WCPO
waters. The data show the significant growth in effort by Pacific island based vessels, whilst most other groups
have remained stable. However, there are two other notable changes with the decline and resurrection of the
US Multilateral fleet (USMLT), following a transfer of 14 Taiwanese vessels to the US register in 2007, and an
increase in other vessel catches, mostly from China, Philippines and Vanuatu.
Figure 4: Trends in annual effort (days at sea) for the top four purse seine fleets, FSMA/domestic and
others operating in the tropical WCP, 2001–2010
Source: SPC.
The above figures do not contain any adjustment for weighting against effort as set out in the VDS weighting
scheme. Details of this are provided in Section 3.6.
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3.2.4
FAD and free school set dependencies
Whilst different fleets demonstrate different dependencies on set types, the overall dependency on free
school fishing has increased over the years. Fishing on drifting FADs evolved from a traditional
dependency on log sets in the mid-1990s. The current distribution (2011) between set types shows 79 %
on free schools (no doubt partly a response to the three month closure from 1 July to 30th September), 14
% on set FADs, and 7 % on drifting FADs. Table 5 shows that EU purse seine vessels have the highest
dependency on drifting FADs of all the main fleets operating in the region.
Table 5: PNA catch by set type (average 2005-2009)
Free
Drifting Anchored
Log
Other
school
FAD
FAD
63%
18%
19%
0%
1%
42%
40%
18%
0%
0%
41%
42%
16%
0%
0%
14%
9%
77%
0%
0%
27%
4%
69%
0%
0%
50%
20%
22%
9%
0%
58%
8%
33%
1%
0%
28%
11%
11%
13%
48%
43%
30%
0%
1%
0%
28%
25%
9%
89%
88%
87%
22%
24%
32%
0%
0%
0%
2%
7%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
1%
Total
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
Korea
Taiwan
Japan
USA
New Zealand
Vanuatu
China
Philippines
Spain (EU)
Ecuador
El Salvador
Total DWFN
FSMA and Domestic
Source: SPC / Williams
et al.,
2010.
3.3
3.3.1
The Longline fishery
The fleet
The longline fishery fishing in the WCPO accounts for around 6 % of the catch of total tropical tuna species
caught inside the range in the tropical area bounded by 20°N and 20°S, mostly yellowfin and bigeye tunas,
but also albacore (Thunnus
alalunga),
and a range of billfish including three species of marlin (blue marlin,
striped marlin and black marlin), swordfish (Xiphias
gladius),
pelagic and reef sharks (mostly blue shark,
shortfin mako, silky shark, oceanic whitetip and hammerhead) and a bycatch of other species.
There are four types of fisheries that occur using longline within the area of the Pacific islands:
Fisheries for yellowfin and bigeye, targeted by large distant sashimi freezer longliners (typically
>250 GRT). These vessels almost exclusively operate from Japan and Korea and fish long
voyages, transshipping at sea, exclusively supplying the sashimi market in Japan and Korea. They
fish in the HS, in the HS Pockets (HSPs) and within national EEZs, the latter under bilateral
agreements.
Fisheries for albacore, targeted by smaller (typically <100 GRT) offshore vessels, undertaking trips
of less than one month, with freezer, ice or chill capacity, and serving frozen markets, with product
transshipped or landed direct into one of a small number of regional hubs including Fiji, American Samoa
and French Polynesia. Most product is destined for canneries, specializing in albacore (which provides
‘white meat tuna’ for the US market), but may also be sold fresh, frozen and or as cooked loins to EU
and Japanese markets. The largest component of these fleets are Taiwanese and Chinese, operating
through bilateral or domestic charter agreements with Western Pacific islands including Solomon
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Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji, FSM, Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) and Kiribati. In addition, there are
some 200 vessels domestically owned and operated from a number of Western, Central and South
Pacific countries and territories including French Polynesia, Fiji, New Caledonia, Cook Is, Samoa and
PNG.
A South Pacific distant water fishery, which is a new fishery comprising distant water vessels.
These vessels exclusively target swordfish, in the HS South of 20°S.
Domestic fisheries in sub-tropical and temperate waters comprising vessels targeting different species
in sub-tropical and temperate waters. Fleets include those from Japan, Australia, New Zealand and
USA.
The total number of vessels involved in the tropical WCPO fisheries has generally been around 3,000, but
around 780 vessels operate in the Pacific island waters, with a further 500 or so operating specifically on the
high seas. Of the vessels known to be fishing in the island EEZs, the group has seen an increase by around
180 vessels in the last 5 years, with new entrants joining the fishery from the Indian Ocean
9
(FFA, 2011). The
bulk of this increase has taken place post Conservation and Management Measure (CMM) 2008-01.
SPC data (WCPFC, 2010) show that the number of EU longliners from Spain operating for at least part of
their fishing time in the WCP area has declined from 18 vessels in 2008 to 5 in 2010. The Spanish vessels
operate on the South Pacific distant-water swordfish fishery, which is a relatively new fishery and lies outside
the EEZs of Pacific island countries. This fishery is very distinct from the longline fisheries exploiting tropical
tunas and albacore.
3.3.2
Longline catch by species
The WCPO catch by the longline fleet amounted to 232,000 tonnes in 2010. Table 6 shows the total catch of
Pacific island and distant water fleets by species for 2010. Additional data for other years are provided in
Appendix G.
A representative from the Taiwanese fishing vessel company, Yuh Yow, stated that this was largely in response to piracy in the
Indian Ocean (Pers. Comm., December, 2011).
9
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Table 6: Longline catches in the WCPO, tonnes, 2010.
Group
Yellowfin
Bigeye
Pacific island EEZs
Albacore
Billfish
Total
%
dependence
on
Island
EEZs
31%
26%
28%
24%
100%
0%
42%
%
dependence
High Seas
69%
74%
72%
76%
0%
100%
58%
45,150
27%
Japan
Korea
Taiwan
China
Pacific islands
EU
Total
5,486
3,578
3,383
982
8,398
0
21,826
Yellowfin
1,785
3,145
1,057
1,212
2,706
0
9,906
Bigeye
5,749
11,591
10,600
7,653
0
8
35,602
45,508
27%
562
1,035
685
289
1,834
0
4,405
High Seas
Albacore
Billfish
4,064
4,887
11,656
1,081
0
7
21,695
56,861
33%
5,627
2,247
7,156
1,864
0
1,001
17,895
22,300
13%
1,499
665
10,839
1,158
21,003
0
35,165
9,332
8,423
15,964
3,641
33,942
0
71,302
Total
21,138
23,613
41,068
11,680
0
1,018
98,517
169,818
100%
Japan
Korea
Taiwan
China
Pacific islands
EU
Total
Grand total
% by species
5,698
4,887
11,656
1,081
0
2
23,325
45,150
27%
Source: SPC.
However, when excluding the fisheries in non-Pacific island Country EEZs, and associated HS, the total
catch of the principal species amounted to 169,000 tonnes. Several countries have bilateral longline
agreements with Kiribati (China, Korea, Taiwan, Japan, Indonesia, Vanuatu, Fiji, FSM, Philippines and
Indonesia). The Korean catch was the largest at 5,300 tonnes in 2010, 50 % of which was comprised of
bigeye tuna. The EU longline fleet has never fished in Kiribati waters.
3.4
Status of Fish stocks in the region
The status of the three main stocks exploited in the WCP equatorial area is monitored by the Scientific Committee
installed under the WCPFC. The following text summarises the latest scientific advice produced by this
Committee. The status of stocks in the Eastern Pacific Ocean (EPO), as stated by the IATTC, is provided in
Section 3.7.
Skipjack
Skipjack tuna is a fast growing, short-lived species (maximum age ~3 years) that has a rapid population
turnover. It has high resilience to fishing and can support annual catches at the current level (1.7 mn
tonnes). The majority of exploitation occurs on fish that have already reached reproductive maturity (age 1+).
Most skipjack therefore have the opportunity to reproduce before they are exposed to intensive fishing.
According to the key conclusions of the models presented in 2011 (Hoyle
et al.,
2011), the skipjack species is
being exploited to moderate levels, overfishing is not occurring and the stock is not in an overfished state. The
high recent catches (2009-2011) are considered to be sustainable unless recruitment falls persistently below
the long-term average. The Summary Record of the WCPFC 7
th
Scientific Committee notes that: current
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high catches can result in range contractions of the stock (para 224); WCPFC should consider developing
limits on fishing for skipjack (para 225); and catches are specially high in the western equatorial region and
additional purse seine effort will yield only modest gains in long-term skipjack catches and may result in a
corresponding increase in fishing mortality for bigeye and yellowfin (para 226).
Yellowfin
Yellowfin tuna has a life span of up to ~7 years of age, grows rapidly and has a moderate population turnover.
Yellowfin begins spawning at ~1.5-2 years of age (~100 cm fork length or 20 kg). Yellowfin are taken by a
variety of gears - purse seine (>50 % of the WCPO catch by weight, with a wide size range of fish), longline
(16 %, mostly adults), pole-and-line (4 %), plus a range of gears in the domestic fisheries in Indonesia and
Philippines, taking mostly smaller fish (25-30 %). The total WCPO yellowfin catch has been between 270,000
and 440,000 tonnes since 2000, but reached a record 543,000 tonnes in 2008 before falling back to 350,000
tonnes in 2010. Langley
et al.
(2011) undertook the most current yellowfin assessment on a regional basis
across 6 regions within the WCPO (Figure 5), where Kiribati falls into region 4. The assessment (Langley
et
al.,
2011) concludes that the WCPO yellowfin stock is not in an overfished state, but that depletion has
increased steadily over time and is considerably higher in equatorial region 3. Recent depletion levels in region
3 are approximately 0.30 for total biomass (i.e. a 70 % reduction from the unexploited level). Impacts are
moderate in region 4 (37 %), lower (about 15-25 %) in regions 1, 5, and 6 and minimal (9 %) in region 2. If
stock-wide over-fishing criteria were applied at the level of the stock assessment model regions, region 3
would be fully exploited and the remaining regions are under-exploited. The Langley
et al.
(2011) stock
assessment for yellowfin indicates that the stock is at least fully exploited and that there is a 50 % chance that
overfishing is occurring. The WCPFC Scientific Committee has recommended that fishing mortality be reduced.
The attribution of depletion to various fisheries or groups of fisheries indicates that the associated purse-
seine fishery and Philippines/Indonesian domestic fisheries have the highest impact, particularly in region 3,
while the unassociated purse seine fishery has a moderate impact.
Figure 5: Distribution of cumulative WCPFC yellowfin tuna catch from 2000-2009 by 5 degree squares
of latitude and longitude and fishing gear;
Source: Langley
et al.,
2011. Longline (blue), purse-seine (green), pole-and-line (grey) and other (principally Indonesia
and Philippines, dark orange). The grey lines indicate the regional spatial stratification of the assessment models.
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Bigeye
Bigeye tuna lives to at least 12 years of age, grows more slowly than yellowfin, has lower natural mortality,
and a smaller stock size. Bigeye reaches a maximum size of ~120 kg, and begins spawning at ~3-4 years of
age (~110 cm fork length or 30 kg). Bigeye is caught in large quantities by both the longline and purse
seine component of the catch (Harley, 2010). Purse seine and other surface fisheries have an equal or
greater impact on the spawning stock biomass than longliners (WCPFC, 2011). This is because a
significant exploitation of juveniles occurs in the purse-seine FAD fishery
10
, as well as in the domestic
fisheries of Philippines and Indonesia. These juvenile catches have high impact on the subsequent adult
population, and at the same time, the adult spawning stock continues to decline (Davies
et al.,
2011).
Recent assessments show that overfishing of bigeye tuna is currently occurring. Catches are still around 7 %
higher than the Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY) of 131,400 tonnes. This is despite current high levels of
recruitment into the fishery. Therefore, the current levels of catch are unlikely to be sustainable (WCPFC SC 7,
2011). The WCPFC Scientific Committee has recommended that fishing mortality be reduced by a minimum
of 28 % from the average levels for 2001—2004. These years are the set reference years for effort
restrictions applied under CMM 2008-01 (See Section 3.6.1).
3.5
Ecosystem issues associated with tuna fisheries
The purse seine bycatch species varies according to whether sets are associated (FAD fisheries) or
unassociated (i.e. free swimming schools). Molony (2007) estimated retained catch of non-target species (i.e.
other than skipjack, bigeye and yellowfin tuna) to be around 1.8 % by weight of the total purse seine catch in
the WCPFC Convention Area, equating to approximately 36,000 tonnes in 2008.
Langley
et al.
(2008), analysed fishery observer data from the equatorial purse-seine fishery for the period
2001−2006 to determine the species composition of catches (by weight) from unassociated (free-school) and
associated (log, drifting FAD and anchored FAD) sets (Figure 6).
Apart from skipjack tuna, yellowfin and bigeye tuna are clearly the main species taken in the purse seine
fishery. Langley
et al.
(2008) found that all set types were dominated by catches of skipjack tuna and yellowfin,
with these two species accounting for 99 % of the unassociated sets and 91 % of the catch from the
associated set types.
Other species represented less than 0.2 % of the catch from unassociated sets, and 1–2 % of the catch from
associated sets, of which rainbow runner (Elegatis
bipinnulata)
was the most significant component. The
remainder of the catch from associated sets is comprised of surface-orientated species that are principally
oceanic in habitat (e.g. mackerel scad (Decapterus
macarellus),
frigate tuna (Auxis
thazard)
and mahi-mahi
(Coryphaena
hippurus))
or occupy both reef and oceanic habitats (e.g. rainbow runner; oceanic triggerfish
(Balistidae), silky shark (Carcharhinus
falciformis)
and oceanic whitetip shark (C.
longimanus)).
Kirby (2006) attributed fishing mortality by purse seine set type and ranked by productivity risk. Of the main
bycatch species identified as taken in FAD fisheries, frigate tuna, spotted and black triggerfish, mahi-mahi and
mackerel scad were assessed as relatively low risk, whilst silky shark was assessed as having the highest
relative risk. The rate of shark bycatch is significantly greater in FAD fisheries, recording 88 % and 93 % of the
sharks respectively in regions 3 and 4 respectively (Clarke
et al.,
2011), with an estimated 1-10 silky sharks
caught per day, amounting to between 48,000 to 84,000 silky sharks, 1,000 oceanic whitetip sharks caught per
annum (Lawson, 2011). Oceanic whitetip sharks are found throughout the WCPO between 30
o
N and S
latitude. This species is also commonly encountered in the purse seine fishery, particularly in areas just south
of the equator. Silky sharks have a similar distribution to oceanic whitetips but appear to be concentrated in a
10
Catches
of bigeye tuna in the free school fishery and 0.8% (Hampton, 2009), whilst in FAD fisheries catches are upwards of 5 % or greater
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narrower latitudinal band between 20
o
N and S latitude. Silky sharks interact with purse seine fisheries over
nearly the entire geographic range of the fishery. Silky sharks were particularly skewed toward juveniles in
tropical waters. However, both species have experienced progressive reductions in Catch Per Unit Effort
(CPUE) since 1999 (Lawson, 2011). As part of the current shark research programme (WCPFC SC7),
preliminary results show that silky sharks are in an overfished state.
Figure 6: Percentage composition of the 20 main species caught by unassociated, log-drifting FAD and
anchored FAD purse-seine sets (by weight) in the WCP–CA determined from recent observer data
(2001–2006).
Source: Langley
et al.,
2008.
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3.6
Management agreements in the WCP and their implications
The key components of the governance and fishery management framework for tuna and related species in
the WCPO, and the tuna purse seine fisheries in particular include:
i) The Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC), the tuna RFMO for the WCPO;
ii) The Parties to the Nauru Agreement, known as PNA or the Nauru Group;
iii) Regional organisations that provide management services to the WCPFC and the PNA, including and
in particular the FFA and the SPC; and
iv) The PNA national governments.
3.6.1
The Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)
The WCPFC is the one of the newest and one of the largest RFMOs. The Commission has 25 members,
comprising Australia, Canada, People‘s Republic of China, Cook Islands, European Union (EU), Federated
States of Micronesia (FSM), Fiji, France, Japan, Kiribati, Korea, Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI), Nauru,
New Zealand, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea (PNG), Philippines, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Chinese Taipei,
Tonga, Tuvalu, United States of America (USA) and Vanuatu (WCPFC, 2009a).
Several other states are granted cooperating non-member (CNM) status on an annual basis, agreeing to
comply with WCPFC measures, participating as observers, and entitled to authorise their vessels to fish in the
WCPO within set limits. At WCPFC6, the CNM status of Belize, El Salvador, Indonesia, Mexico and Senegal
was renewed, and CNM status was extended to Ecuador and Vietnam (WCPFC, 2009b, (paras 22-49).
WCPFC Commission Management Measures (CMMs) have been formulated in the annual sessions of the
Commission (Table 7) by consensus
11
(WCPFC, 2004), with the support of Scientific (SC) and Technical and
Compliance (TCC) committee meetings. The SC meetings deal with collection and validation of data from the
fishery, monitoring and assessment of stocks, monitoring and assessment of the ecosystem and evaluation of
management options. However, proper scientific work such as stock assessments is conducted by an external
body (scientific services provider) – the SPC's Oceanic Fisheries Programme. Only since 2011 has the TCC
dealt in a substantial manner with assessing compliance with the CMMs based on a trial Compliance
Monitoring Scheme (CMM 2010-03). Unlike compliance committees in most RFMOs, the WCPFC TCC has a
broad agenda similar to that of the Annual Commission Session and works as a pre-plenary for discussion on
all items to be tackled at the Annual Meeting. Small Pacific islands often are represented by the same
delegates to SC, TCC and Annual Meetings, partly due to insufficient numbers of technically qualified
personnel in national administrations. The WCPFC Secretariat undertakes a number of compliance duties
which relate to monitoring, control and surveillance (MCS) on the HSPs and collation of specified reports on
compliance from the members. These reports include details on: the WCPFC vessel monitoring system (VMS),
high seas boarding and inspection, the regional observer programme, transshipment verification and Port
State Measures.
The WCPFC has a consensus-based decision-making process, with provision for a two-chambered voting process requiring a 75% majority in
both chambers if all efforts to reach a decision by consensus have been exhausted, (WCPFC, 2004), (Rule 22). From the meeting records, it is
evident that the voting provision has not been used for deciding on conservation and management measures, Rules of Procedure for the WCPFC.
Available from http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/commission-01/rules-procedure
11
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Table 7: WCPFC measures relevant to the fisheries under assessment
Measures
Key Relevant Features
CMM 2007-
Ensure vessels have
Automatic Location Communicator
(ALC) on in high seas
02
12
: VMS
Not undermine measure by transferring purse seine effort to areas N of 20N or S of 20S.
Within 20N to 20S:
CMM 2008-
Limit high seas purse seine effort to 2004 levels or average 2001-04;
01
13
Limit EEZ effort to 2004 levels (PNA) or take compatible measures;
Yellowfin
FAD closure – 3 months from 2010;
and Bigeye
Closure of 2 high seas pockets;
100% catch retention/no discards (for tuna species);
100% observer coverage; and
capacity of “other fisheries” generally limited to 2004 levels or average 2001-04.
Implement FAO Guidelines;
CMM 2008-
Comatose turtles to be brought on board and resuscitation attempted;
03
14
Proper handling and release techniques and equipment to be applied as per WCPFC
Sea Turtles
Guidelines;
Purse seine operators to follow specific procedures to avoid /release turtles; and
Purse seine operators to report all interactions and provide reports to WCPFC.
CMM 2009-
02
15
:
Specific rules for FAD closure and catch retention, including prohibiting, during the FAD closure,
FAD
conducting any part of a set within one nautical mile of a FAD.
Closure
and Catch
Retention
CMM 2009-
06
16
:
Regulation
No purse seine transshipment at sea, except in designated special cases.
of
Transshipm
ent
Monitoring and reporting systems implemented to ensure that members implement:
Catch and effort limits;
2010-03
17
:
Catch and effort reporting;
Compliance
Spatial and temporal closures and gear restrictions;
monitoring
Observer and VMS requirements; and
Scientific data provision, reporting and handling.
CMM 2007-02, Commission Vessel Monitoring scheme. http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2007-02/commission-vessel-monitoring-system
CMM 2008-01, Conservation and management measure for yellowfin and bigeye tuna in the WCPO, http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-
2008-01/conservation-and-management-measure-bigeye-and-yellowfin-tuna-western-and-central-pa
14
WCPFC CMM 2008-03, Conservation and management of sea turtles, http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2008-03/conservation-and-management-
sea-turtles
15
WCPFC 2009-02, High Seas FAD closure and catch retention, http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2009-02/conservation-and-management-measure-
application-high-seas-fad-closures-and-catch-ret WCPFC CMM 2008-03, Conservation and management of sea turtles,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2008-03/conservation-and-management-sea-turtles
16
WCPFC CMM 2009-06, Conservation and management measure on the regulation of transshipment, http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2009-
06/conservation-and-management-measure-regulation-transshipment-0
17
WCPFC CMM 2010-03, Conservation and management measure for compliance monitoring scheme, http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2010-
03/conservation-and-management-measure-compliance-monitoring-scheme
13
WCPFC
12
WCPFC,
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Measures
Key Relevant Features
Members comply with reporting systems confirming confirmation of the Implementation of the
National Plan of Action on Sharks
Require full utilisation through retention of carcass; and
Implement 5% fin to weight ratio.
Prohibit retention, transshipment or trading in fins caught in contravention
Encourage live release of sharks in non-target fisheries
2010-07
18
:
Sharks
Source: WCPFC.
The WCPFC has adopted a core package of measures in CMM 2008-01 (WCPFC, 2010) for the Pacific purse
seine (and longline) fisheries with the objectives to:
Ensure through the implementation of compatible measures for the HS, HSPs and EEZs that bigeye
and yellowfin tuna stocks are maintained at levels capable of producing their maximum sustainable
yield; as qualified by relevant environmental and economic factors including the special requirements
of developing States in the Convention area as expressed by Article 5 of the Convention;
Achieve, through the implementation of a package of measures, over a three-year period commencing
in 2009, a minimum of 30 % reduction in bigeye tuna fishing mortality from the annual average during
the period 2001-2004 or 2004;
Ensure that there is no increase in fishing mortality for yellowfin tuna beyond the annual average
during the period 2001-2004 average or 2004; and
Adopt a package of measures that shall be reviewed annually and adjusted as necessary by the
Commission taking account of the scientific advice available at the time as well as the implementation
of the measures. In addition, this review shall include any adjustments required by Commission
decisions regarding management objectives and reference points.
CMM 2008-01 is a complex measure which imposes purse seine effort limits and longline catch limits, a
closure relating to purse seine fishing using FADs, the closure of two HSPs to purse seine fishing, and
measures relating to observer coverage, development of FAD management plans, catch retention, and
juvenile tuna catch mitigation research, to be progressively implemented during the period 2009-2011.
For 2009, for the purse seine fishery, effort in PNA EEZs and the HS was limited to 2004 reference levels; the
FAD closure was applied from August 1
st
to 30
th
September, with mandatory observer coverage during that
time; and bigeye, skipjack and yellowfin tuna were required to be retained, and not discarded; and the purse
seine fishery on the high seas was also subject to the FAD closure, an effort limit, catch retention and
mandatory observer coverage.
The 2004 reference levels for the purse seine effort limits included effort obligated under existing agreements,
which had been registered with the Commission (para 7). Twelve agreements have been registered with the
Commission (WCPFC, 2008). In most cases, the effort provided for in these agreements was fully subscribed
in 2004, but in the case of the United States Multi-Lateral Treaty (USMLT), only 21 of the 40 vessels provided
for in the Treaty were active in 2004. Vessels of Small Island developing State Members are exempt from the
purse seine effort limits.
As an incentive to encourage exploration of innovative arrangements to mitigate bigeye bycatch, Commission
Cooperating Members (CCMs) meeting certain conditions were authorised to apply a 10 % reduction in purse
seine bigeye bycatch as an alternative arrangement to the high seas FAD closure (para 15).
WCPFC CMM 2010-07, Conservation and management measure for sharks, http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2010-03/conservation-and-
management-measure-compliance-monitoring-scheme
18
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For the second two years of the measure applying (2010-2011), effort limitation continues to apply, the FAD
closure is extended to cover the period July 1
st
to 30
th
September each year (3 months), and the closure of two
HSPs wholly enclosed by the EEZs of CCMs (and one Commission Non Cooperating Member (CNM)), as
shown in Figure 7, applies from 1
st
January 2010. From January 1
st
2010, and 100 % observer coverage from
the Commission’s Regional Observer Programme has been required.
Figure 7: WCPFC High Sea pockets
Notes: The WCPFC Convention Area, with the two HSPs wholly enclosed between 20
0
N and 20
0
S are shown in black.
The PNA EEZs are shown in yellow, and the archipelagic waters of PNG, Solomon Islands, Fiji and Vanuatu are in white
(CMM 2008-01).
For the longline fishery, the total catch of bigeye by longline gear will be subject to phased reduction such that
by January 2012, the longline catch of bigeye tuna is 70 % of the average annual catch in 2001-2004 or 2004,
with a phased 30 % reduction for CCMs, with 10 % in the first year, 20 % in the second and 30 % in the third
year. Exemptions apply to CCMs which caught less than 2,000 tonnes in 2004, provided that their catch does
not exceed 2,000 tonnes in each of the years 2009-2011, with other exemptions applying to small island
developing states (SIDS) and longline fleets catching less than 5,000 tonnes of bigeye and landing exclusively
fresh fish.
All CCMs are required to report to each regular session of the Technical and Compliance Committee on the
implementation of CMM 2008-01 measure (para. 45), and the measures are reviewed annually in conjunction
with the scientific advice to measure the impact and compliance with the measure (para. 46).
Information on the effectiveness of CMM 2008-01 is discussed below.
WCPFC CMMs also place an increasingly important emphasis on ecosystem management. CMM 2010 now
places binding obligations on CCMs to implement national plans of action on shark management. The current
focus is to minimise shark retention, but it is also likely that shark mitigation measures will form the basis of
CMMs in the near future, pending the outcome of research into the status of silky sharks.
Additional comment is also relevant on the issue of observers. Appendix C highlights the failure of Kiribati
observers to regularly supply observer reports as reported by EU fleet owners, and this can only compromise
efforts aimed at effective management and responsible fisheries. This assertion is backed up by the 2011
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WCPFC 3rd Annual report for the regional observer programme, which highlighted that 57 % of observer trip
reports due had not been submitted. Section 3.7 provides additional comments on the issue of observers
pertaining to WCPFC and IATTC requirements.
With respect to fisheries management in archipelagic waters, these waters can be important spawning areas
for tuna, however the majority of spawning probably takes place widely throughout the western and central
tropical Pacific where suitable habitat exists and is not just restricted to archipelagic waters. For skipjack,
yellowfin and bigeye tuna, this is where the sea surface temperature is greater than about 26
o
C and
productivity is suitable to enable adult tuna to enter spawning condition. Modelled distribution of skipjack tuna
larvae by Lehodey
et al.
(2011) based on the Spatial Ecosystem and Populations Dynamics Model
(SEAPODYM) shows very wide distributions across the Pacific (http://www.wcpfc.int/node/3633).
Figure 8: Mean distribution of skipjack larvae, 1
st
quarter for the decade 1990-1999
Source: Lehodey
et al.,
2011.
3.6.2
Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA) and related management arrangements
The PNA is an alliance of Pacific island states whose EEZs collectively account for a significant bulk of the
region’s tuna catch and 54 % of the purse seine catch. The Nauru Agreement is a regional Agreement
concerned with Cooperation in the Management of Fisheries of Common Interest (see Box 3 for further
details). The Agreement is a binding Treaty-level instrument considered to be a sub-regional or regional
fisheries management arrangement for the purpose of the United Nations Fish Stocks Agreement (UNFSA)
and the WCPFC Convention. The countries of Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Papua New
Guinea, Nauru, Federated States of Micronesia and Palau, have worked collaboratively since 1982 to manage
the tuna stocks within their national waters through the Agreement. PNA coordinate the implementation of
management measures with a view to enhancing economic benefits from the fishery (PNA, 1982), including:
Harmonizing the terms and conditions of access for distant water fishing vessels/fleets; and
Granting preferential access to vessels of the Parties in order to encourage domestic participation in
the fishing industry.
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The Organisation operates its secretariat from the Marshall Islands. Its objectives are to:
Enhance regional solidarity; and
Promote economic control and participatory rights over the tuna resources in PNA waters.
Maximise the profitability of the fishery and ancillary industries within the PNA;
Develop initiatives to maximise the sustained direct and indirect economic benefits to the Parties; and
Develop strategic fisheries conservation and management initiatives.
Its primary focus is to:
The PNA countries operate an access and management regime, which optimises revenue collection for the
parties, as well as promoting the development of the Parties’ indigenous fishery sector.
Box 3: Contents of the Nauru Agreement
Article I
The Parties shall seek to establish a co-ordinated approach to the fishing of the common stocks in the
Fisheries Zones by foreign fishing vessels and in particular:
(a) shall establish principles for the granting of priority to applications by fishing vessels of the Parties to fish
within the Fisheries Zones over other foreign fishing vessels;
(b) shall establish, as a minimum, uniform terms and conditions under which the Parties may licence foreign
fishing vessels to fish within the Fisheries Zones regarding:
(i)
the requirement that each foreign fishing vessel apply for and possess a licence or permit; the
placement of observer on foreign fishing vessels;
(ii)
the requirement that a standardized form of log book be maintained on a day-to-day basis which
shall be produced at the direction of the competent authorities;
(iii)
the timely reporting to the competent authorities of required information concerning the entry, exit
and other movement and activities of foreign fishing vessels within the Fisheries Zones; and
(iv)
standardized identification of foreign fishing vessels.
(c) seek to establish other uniform terms and conditions under which the Parties may licence foreign fishing vessels
to fish within the Fisheries Zones, including:
(i)
the payment of an access fee, which shall be calculated in accordance with principles
established by the Parties;
(ii)
the requirement to supply to the competent authorities complete catch and effort data for each
voyage;
(iii)
the requirement to supply to the competent authorities such additional information as the
Parties may determine to be necessary;
(iv)
the requirement that the flag States or organisations having authority over a foreign fishing
vessel take such measures as are necessary to ensure compliance by such vessel with the
relevant fisheries laws of the Parties; and
(v)
such other terms and conditions as the Parties may from time to time consider necessary.
Article II:
The Parties shall seek to establish a co-ordinated approach to the fishing of the common stocks in the
Fisheries Zones by foreign fishing vessels and in particular:
(a) shall establish principles for the granting of priority to applications by fishing vessels of the Parties to fish
within the Fisheries Zones over other foreign fishing vessels;
(b) shall establish, as a minimum, uniform terms and conditions under which the Parties may licence foreign
fishing vessels to fish within the Fisheries Zones regarding:
(i)
the requirement that each foreign fishing vessel apply for and possess a licence or permit;
(iii)
the requirement that a standardized form of log book be maintained on a day-to-day basis
which shall be produced at the direction of the competent authorities;
(iv)
the timely reporting to the competent authorities of required information concerning the entry,
exit and other movement and activities of foreign fishing vessels within the Fisheries Zones;
and
(v)
standardized identification of foreign fishing vessels.
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(c) seek to establish other uniform terms and conditions under which the Parties may licence foreign fishing
vessels to fish within the Fisheries Zones, including:
(i)
the payment of an access fee, which shall be calculated in accordance with principles
established by the Parties;
(ii)
the requirement to supply to the competent authorities complete catch and effort data for each
voyage;
(iii)
the requirement to supply to the competent authorities such additional information as the
Parties may determine to be necessary;
(iv)
the requirement that the flag States or organisations having authority over a foreign fishing
vessel take such measures as are necessary to ensure compliance by such vessel with the
relevant fisheries laws of the Parties; and
(v)
such other terms and conditions as the Parties may from time to time consider necessary.
Article III:
The Parties shall seek to standardise their respective licensing procedures and in particular:
(a) seek to establish and adopt uniform measures and procedures relating to the licensing of foreign fishing vessels,
including application formats, licensing formats and other relevant documents; and
(b) explore the possibility of establishing, without prejudice to the respective sovereign rights of the Parties, a
centralised licensing system of foreign fishing vessels.
Article IV:
The Parties shall seek the assistance of the South Pacific Forum Fisheries Agency in establishing
procedures and administrative arrangements for the exchange and analysis of:
(a) statistical data concerning catch and effort by fishing vessels in the Fisheries Zones relating to the common
stocks of fish; and
(b) information relating to vessel specifications and fleet composition.
Source: Nauru Agreement (PNA 1982).
The Nauru Agreement is implemented through binding Implementing Arrangements and associated
Arrangements, which include:
1
st
Implementing Arrangement (PNA, 1983),
setting minimum licensing standards, including
reporting, inspection and onboard observation, vessel identification and “good standing” on the FFA
regional register;
2nd Implementing Arrangement (PNA 1990),
adding additional conditions relating to VMS, high
seas reporting and a prohibition on transshipment at sea;
FSM Arrangement (PNA 1994),
establishing arrangements for preferential access among the parties
for vessels meeting certain standards for the provision of domestic economic benefits;
Palau Arrangement (PNA, 1995),
limiting the purse seine fishery, initially by limiting vessel numbers,
but now through the VDS which is described separately in more detail below;
3
rd
Implementing Arrangement (3IA) (PNA, 2008),
applying a FAD closure, 100 % observer
coverage and catch retention/no tuna discards in PNA EEZs, and prohibition of fishing in HSPs for
licensed vessels
19
. The high seas closures were extended (PNA, 2010) to run from 1 January 2011,
applicable to purse seine vessels licensed to fish in PNA EEZs.
These arrangements apply to all vessels, with the only differential applied in the amendment to the 3IA, with a
derogation to allow domestic vessels to introduce large mesh size. The proposed extension of a four month
FAD closure is to be applied to DWFN only.
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The present management measures are also in the process of amendment to include additional elements of
the PNA 3IA, including:
A ban on the setting of whale sharks (PNA, 2010);
Introduction of additional HS closures (high seas areas between 10˚N and 20˚S and 170˚E and 150˚W
20˚S and 170˚E and 150˚W)
20
(which is not scientifically supported and which would have a major
impact on EU vessels fishing in Kiribati waters and high seas areas outside the EEZ); and
An increase in the minimum mesh size for purse seine nets to 90 mm (3.5ins) measured from knot to
knot in the bunt and 240 mm (9ins) in 70 % of the body of each purse seine net.
References to the Palau and Nauru agreements are usually explicit in each of the Party’s national fishery acts,
and as such adoption of PNA Agreements are binding on the Parties.
The PNA also collaborate to achieve the objectives of the Nauru Agreement and other regional and
international instruments through a coordinated approach to their participation in broader groups, including the
FFA, SPC and the WCPFC and to their relationships with fishing access partners. In this respect, the First and
Second Implementing Arrangements provide the basis for the FFA Harmonised Minimum Terms and
Conditions (see Box 4) and for many of the compliance elements of the WCPFC Convention and the WCPFC
compliance programmes, and the 3IA provides the major purse seine elements of WCPFC CMM 2008-01. The
amendments to the third implementation Agreement (PNA, 2010) will formulate the PNA’s proposals for
change to CMM 2008-01, but are already binding on the parties and will be applied to the DWFNs through the
Minimum Terms and Conditions (MTCs).
The closure of additional High Seas areas between 10N and 20S and 170E and 150W, effective 1 January 2011, PNA Circular
2010-01, 24 May 2010, Outcomes of the 29
th
Annual Meeting of the Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA29), 19-23 May 2010,
Majuro, Marshall Islands. It was noted that this had not been introduced as part of the Kiribati Minimum Terms and Conditions
(MTCs).
20
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Box 4: The Harmonised Minimum Terms and Conditions for Foreign Fishing Vessel Access
Common Regional Licence Form to be carried on board at all times;
Good Standing on the FFA Vessel Register: that the vessel and its operator to have good standing on
the FFA Vessel Register; and vessel to be registered on the WCPFC Record of Fishing Vessels;
Transshipment: no purse seine vessel, except for group seiners, to transship at sea; 72 hours’ notice;
submit full reports on transshipping;
Pay all fees required;
Maintain and Submit Catch Logs in Zones and High Seas;
Reporting: each Wednesday; within a reasonable time of entry into and departure from the zone, and
entry into a port. Out-turn documentation, and landing and dock receipts to be provided;
Observers to be allowed and assisted to undertake their duties, every effort to be made to achieve 100
% coverage ;
Agent to be appointed to receive and respond to any legal process ;
Vessels in Transit to have fishing equipment stowed or secured for fishing;
Port State Control: FFA members to exercise powers of port State over fishing vessels in their ports;
Inspection/Enforcement: operators to comply instructions and directions given by an authorised and
identified person;
Copy of the International Code of Signals (INTERCO) to be accessible at all times;
Vessels to be identified in accordance with FAO Standards;
Flag States or Fishermen's Associations to be required in agreements to take measures to ensure
compliance by their vessels;
Vessel Monitoring System to be implemented;
Fish Aggregating Devices to be clearly marked and identified; and
Compulsory pre-fishing inspections to be carried out.
Source: FFA, 2010.
Hampton
et al.,
(2011) drew a number of conclusions in assessing the WCPFC CMM 2008-01 and PNA third
party implementation arrangements:
Purse seine effort has expanded since the introduction of CMM 2008-01, with effort (excluding
domestic purse seiners based in Indonesia and Philippines) in 2010 estimated to have increased by
approximately 18 % compared to effort in 2004. VMS data to 30 September 2011 indicates a further
increase in effort of approximately 7 % over the same time in 2010;
Catches of skipjack and yellowfin were moderately reduced during the closures, but bigeye catches
were strongly reduced. In 2010, the proportions of effort associated with FAD usage outside the
closure period, particularly the months immediately before and after the FAD closure, had lower FAD
usage than is typically the case. While catches were reduced during the closures, the average size of
the catch was higher for all species, particularly yellowfin, during the closures because of the larger
average size of fish caught in unassociated sets. These larger average sizes have higher unit values;
Available data from all sources indicate that the HSP closure since 1 January 2010 has largely been
respected. Since January 2010, effort has been concentrated mainly in the EEZs, with no apparent re-
distribution of effort to the eastern high seas;
The 2010 longline catch of bigeye tuna of 61,676 tonnes (as reported by CCMs) is approximately 74
% of the average catch for 2001-2004.
The reduction in purse seine FAD effort in 2010 had the greatest effect in terms of removing
overfishing (67.4 % of overfishing removed on bigeye tuna) followed by the reduction in longline catch
in 2010 (34.7 % of the overfishing removed). For purse seine closures, there was a relatively small
incremental reduction in fishing mortality (F)/FMSY compared to that achieved by a FAD closure; and
It was estimated that if the CMM was implemented without exemptions, approximately half of the
overfishing that is estimated could occur under the CMM, could be removed (reduction of bigeye tuna
F/FMSY from 1.35 to 1.17).
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Sibert
et al.
(2011) applying the Spatial Ecosystem and Populations Dynamics Model (SEAPODYM) found
that:
Simply closing areas to purse-seine fishing, produces only very small increases in bigeye biomass.
Area closures could even be counter-productive in some cases if fishing effort is simply displaced and
the closure is used as a justification to increase fishing effort outside of the closed areas. Provisional
analysis of the 2010 purse seine closure of areas alone shows that the closure was fairly well
respected by the purse seine fleets, but total purse seine effort increased by 10 % and was deployed
in the EEZs surrounding area. This outcome suggests that the response of the purse seine fleets to
the closures was not only to deploy effort in areas adjacent to the closed areas but also to increase
effort in these areas. The 2010 situation almost certainly increased fishing mortality of juvenile bigeye.
However, closed areas for highly migratory species can be useful fishery management tools, if the
displaced effort is eliminated, i.e. when combined with an overall reduction in effort, as opposed to
transferring effort elsewhere;
FAD prohibition with redistributed effort to free school sets resulted in a significant improvement in the
adult bigeye biomass in the WCPFC convention area with a strong positive impact on bigeye stock
conservation; and
Benefits from any bigeye conservation measure will only be detectable after 10 years and be fully
realized after two decades, i.e. in the 2030s assuming timely implementation.
The Palau Arrangement and Vessel Day Scheme (VDS)
3.6.3
The VDS is a scheme under the Palau Arrangement for the Management of the Western Purse Seine Fishery
(PNA, 2004), which establishes a system of tradable fishing days allocated to the Parties as Party Allowable
Effort (PAE). The Arrangement was established to
Regulate the number of purse seine vessels to be licensed by the Parties at any one time, in response
to scientific advice on resource sustainability and the rapid influx of foreign purse seine vessels into
the WCPO; and
Provide a basis for increasing economic benefits to resource-owning states and economic returns to
participating vessel owners.
Prior to the coming into force of the Palau Arrangement, the PNA had already set in 1990 a provisional limit of
164 purse seine vessels to be licensed by the Parties. The license allocation limit under the Palau
Arrangement in 1995 was for 205 purse seine vessels until the license allocation management scheme was
replaced by the VDS in December 2007. The introduction of the VDS was the result of an external review
commissioned by the Parties in 2000 (Geen, 2000) to assess the effectiveness of the license allocation
management scheme in achieving its objectives under the Palau Arrangement. The review by Geen (2000)
recommended the adoption of the VDS to regulate the number of fishing days by purse seine vessels as a
long term approach to the management of the purse seine fishery. The Parties adopted the VDS in 2006
following the completion of the signing by all Parties of the MoU for the provisional application of the
amendments to the Palau Arrangement to facilitate the implementation of the VDS.
The VDS scheme is managed by the PNA Office (PNAO). The VDS is overseen and reviewed by an Inter-
Party VDS Committee (VDSC), and reports to the annual meeting of the Parties to the Palau Arrangement.
The role of the VDSC is to have oversight on the operational aspects of the VDS and provide
recommendations as appropriate to the plenary meetings of the Parties to the Palau Arrangement, unless
mandated to decide on certain operational aspects of the VDS.
A Total Allowable Effort (TAE) was set at 28,469 days based on the 2004 TAE in PNA waters, and specific
Party Allowable Efforts (PAE) were decided based on a combination of two factors: the average level of purse
seine effort in the waters of the Parties for the period 2001 to 2004 (50 %); and the relative biomass within
each Party EEZ (50 %).
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Other important factors include the following elements:
VDS PAE management: The sequence of events leading to the present PAE management arrangement was:
As from 2008-2009 (MY 1-MY2):
Parties could transfer days between Management Years of the same Management Period, and
between Management Periods;
Parties could seek temporary increases subject to the approval of the Parties;
VDS applied a rolling three year over Management Period; and
Exchanges between parties were allowed to make up for any excesses and shortfalls.
As from 2010 (MY 3):
The ability to transfer days from one year to the next ceased;
Exchanges between parties allowed in order to avoid over excesses in individual PAEs, or
corresponding shortfalls;
A hybrid adjustment was introduced to the original allocation allowing for 50/50 % or 100/0 % historical
effort/biomass formulation and applying whichever ratio results in a higher PAE for each Party; and
The resultant adjusted TAE based on the hybrid PAE formulation was 33,798 days. The Parties
agreed in the same meeting in June 2009 to strictly apply a limit of 28,469 days for MY3 (2010)
irrespective of the hybrid Adjusted TAE total of 33,798 days, which meant that each Party could use
up their hybrid PAE provided that the agreed limit of 28,469 days was not exceeded.
As from 2011 (MY 4):
In determining the TAE/PAEs for 2011, the Parties adopted the approach of applying the higher PAE
of the hybrid 50/50 % and 100/50 % effort/biomass formulation and this time to standardize the PAEs
such that the total of the standardized PAEs equate to the agreed limit of 28,469 days;
In agreeing to apply a hard limit of 28,469 days in MY4 (2011), the Parties agreed to further amend
the VDS Management Scheme (Attachment C), not to allow transfer days between Management
Years and between Management Periods and not to allow temporary increases for special
circumstances;
In enforcing the hard limit of 28,469 days, each Party thus needed to ensure that its agreed respective
PAE was not exceeded by enabling the transfer/trading of days from other Parties which have surplus
days available for transfer/trading, provided the agreed overall limit of 28,469 days was not exceeded,
otherwise for the Party that has reached its PAE to close off its EEZ to foreign fishing vessels under
bilateral access agreements and to FSMA vessels of other Parties; and
With respect to PAE overruns in 2010, if the level of fishing in the EEZ of a Party exceeds its PAE for
a Management Year, that Party’s PAE for the following Management Year shall be adjusted by
deducting in the case of the overrun 120 % of the excess. In this case the Administrator alerted the
Parties and those who were likely to exceed their PAEs by the end of the year of the possibility. In
agreeing to apply the hard limits in 2011, and also in standardizing the hybrid model as adjusted by
the Parties in April 2010, the Parties effectively reduced their individual PAEs by 18 % in order to
arrive at the Hard Limits of a PAE of 28,469 days.
Definition of a Fishing Day: For the purpose of the Scheme, a fishing day is defined as any calendar day, or
part of a calendar day, during which a purse seine vessel is in the waters of a Party outside a port, but does
not include days for which advance notice has been given that a vessel will be in the waters of a Party but will
not be undertaking fishing activities, such as when a vessel is in transit. Vessel days involving fishing in more
than one zone in a day shall be apportioned according to the distribution of reported positions in a day
between zones. This principle also applies to days involving reporting from the waters of non-parties and the
High Seas.
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Fishing Power: Recognising that the fishing power of vessels varies, particularly with the size of vessels, the
Parties decided that fishing days by vessels of different sizes should be accounted for as follows:
Small vessels of less than 50 meters in length: 0.5 days;
Vessels in the 50 to 80 meters range as equal: 1 day; and
Vessels over 80 meters: 1.5 days.
Allowance for FSM and the Multilateral Treaty: In order to meet their obligations under the FSM arrangement
and the Multilateral Treaty with the US, the Parties have set aside pools of fishing days to provide for fishing
effort by FSM Arrangement vessels fishing outside the waters of their Home Parties and US Treaty vessels.
The number of days in these pools has been calculated as the average fishing days based on the 2004 TAE in
PNA waters. These determined the allocations for vessels fishing under the FSM Arrangement and the US
Treaty. These were originally set at 2,670 and 3,540 but subsequently adjusted to 3,122 and 5,838 days to
take account of adjustments in fishing effort and revisions made in CMM 2008-01. Both these limits have been
consistently exceeded. The US to 5,838 days, 7,477 days, 8,920 days in 2008, 2009 and 2010; and FSMA by
3,122 days, 3,435 days and 5,592 days in 2008, 2009 and 2010. Under the current USMLT negotiations the
US is seeking an allocation of 9,000 days, which will include 1,000 days from non-PNA parties.
Bringing the US fleet under the VDS scheme will reduce the Parties’ individual PAEs and limit their
development aspirations and ability to maintain existing fisheries arrangements. Negotiations reconvene in
February 2012. However, based on recent communiqués between FFA and the US, it appears likely that PNA
may well agree on a limit of 7,000 days.
Figure 6 shows the adjustments to vessel days, following the application of the weighting system.
Figure 9: DWFN / FSMA and Domestic Purse seine effort by PNA licensed purse seine fleet
Source: PNAO.
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Table 8 below provides the outline of the allocation between the parties under the VDS.
Table 8: PNA VDS allocations, uptake by management year (2008-2011) and transfers
Party
alloca
tion
Party
allocation
FSM
Kiribati
Marsh. Is
Nauru
Palau
PNG
Sol. Is
Tuvalu
Total
Annual
adjustments
Per
cent
Uptake in MY 1-MY3
2008
21
2009
2010
Adjusted
PAEs
MY 4 (2011)
%
Uptake
2012
2012 PAEs
6,253
22%
5,047
4,591
5,648
5,522
19%
5,040
5,522
6,194
22%
3,998
5,687
4,795
5,450
19%
4,379
5,474
2,727
10%
712
456
637
2,234
8%
2,234
2,234
1,452
5%
1,511
1,507
2,139
1,653
6%
1,699
1,653
595
2%
163
80
118
514
2%
543
514
7,907
28%
12,286
10,606
15,030
10,073
35%
11,144
12,170
2,361
8%
2,302
2,202
2,548
2,146
8%
1,899
2,310
979
3%
588
1,022
973
877
3%
940
1,055
28,468
100%
26,607
26,151
31,888
28,469
100%
27,878
30,932
MY1 (2008): Adjusted to take account of 13 month operational period, and transfers from MY2 to MY 1 (PNG);
MY2 (2009): Transfer of unused fishing days (2008), underutilised days and extra credit to PNG (5,000 days) and
Solomon Is (547 days); MY3: Overshoot in annual TAE 4,978 days, but VDS days in surplus from preceding
years.
Source: PNAO.
The PNA countries established a MoU (PNA, 2011) setting a minimum benchmark fee on 20
th
July
22
, 2011
agreeing the following:
A minimum bench mark fee of US$ 5,000 (€3,448) per fishing day under the Vessel Days Scheme
shall be applied to foreign fishing vessels from 2012 as a non-negotiable bench mark;
The minimum bench mark fee shall be applied to all foreign fishing vessels from the beginning of the
5
th
Management Year (MY5) (2012);
Parties shall inform each other of their negotiations with foreign fishing vessels and collaborate with
each other so that foreign fishing fleets do not play them off against each other; and
The Parties shall duly inform foreign fishing vessels of the implementation of the minimum bench mark
fee when they renew their bilateral access agreements for 2012.
The full operation of the VDS commenced with the first Management Year (MY1) of 12 months from 1 December 2007 to 30
November 2008 which was extended by an additional month to include December 2008 in order to align the subsequent
Management Years of the VDS to a calendar year from the second Management Year (MY2 – 1 January to 31 December 2008)
onwards
21
22
Kiribati
was not present at the meeting but subsequently signed the MoU in August 2011.
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Table 9 below summarises the present status of implementation of national VDS effort limits by the Parties.
Table 9: Implementation of PAE Allocations by PNA members at February 2011
All agreements except for the one with the EU incorporated the VDS and fleets allocated days
per calendar year
FSM
As from 2010. The VDS rate of US$ 5,000/vessel day is incorporated into each Agreement upon
renewal.
Kiribati implemented VDS to all Bilateral agreements renewed in 2011 including Japan, Taiwan,
China and New Zealand. The agreements with Korea and EU lapse in April and September
Kiribati
respectively. Stakeholder consultations suggest that Korea may be willing to pay US$ 8,000 per
day.
Marshall Marshall Islands has implemented VDS limits for all Bilateral Agreements, and has actively
Islands
exchanged Vessel days with PNG, Nauru and Solomon Islands
Nauru operated an Olympic system, closing the fishery as and when the PAE was reached.
Nauru
Nauru closed is EEZ to purse seine fishing in October of 2011. As of 2012 Nauru sold its Vessel
Days by tender. The amounts have not been disclosed.
Palau
Palau operated an Olympic system up until 2011. VDS as from 2012.
Allocated vessel days to fleets in agreements. PNG traded days from Palau, FSM and Marshall
PNG
Islands at US $ 5,000/day
Vessel Days allocated to Korea, Japan and Taiwan in agreements.
Solomon Trading took place between the Solomon Is and RMI, with a rate / vessel day set at US $8,000
Islands
The Solomon Islands closed the fishery from 17
th
June 2011, but this was reopened to the EU
on 29
th
January on the basis of the existing FPA.
Tuvalu
Tuvalu operated an Olympic system up until 2011. VDS as from 2012.
Negotiations are taking place between the US and the Pacific island Parties. Negotiations
USMLT
(based on an exchange of letters) currently stand at a rate of $10,000/Vessel Day (US$ 60
million) per annum, with an additional development component separated.
Source: PNA Administrator.
The VDS is a very large management programme being applied by a group of developing countries of varying
capacities. Taken together with the various other measures of the 3IA and CMM 2008-01, the VDS provides a
central element in the management of the target stocks and is also an important element in the regional
strategy to conserve bigeye.
It is not the principal job of this report to evaluate the VDS; however Table 10 presents some strengths and
weaknesses of the VDS.
Table 10: Strengths and weaknesses of the VDS
Strengths
A binding Agreement on allocations of
fishing effort
Has mechanisms to account for effort
creep
Has high-level political support in the
PNA Leadership
Is based on an extensive consultative
process with stakeholders directly
involved
Is accepted by the WCPFC as
evidenced by its incorporation into
Weaknesses
The lack of a clear link between the PAE and scientific
advice on stock status
PAE allocation has been unsettled, and difficulties have been
addressed in part through increasing the TAE and individual
PAEs through
ad hoc
adjustments
Trading has been slow to develop
The
ad hoc
adjustments, lack of trading and high provisions
for transfers between years resulted in high adjusted PAEs
for 2010 and increased effort in 2010, including allowing the
transfer, instead of removal, of effort from the closed HSPs
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Strengths
CMM 2008-01
Uses a centralized monitoring of effort
by VMS
Has support from the FFA VMS and
the Regional Observer Programme
Has monitoring (logsheet) and
scientific support from SPC
Trading gathered momentum in 2011
Weaknesses
Some Parties have overrun their PAEs, and it is not clear
that the sanctions in the Scheme for over-runs are being
applied
Limits have only been partially applied at national level
There are inconsistencies in the treatment of non-fishing
days, with apparently high provisions for non-fishing days for
one Party, while no provisions are made for other Parties;
The Scheme does not apply to archipelagic waters and effort
has increased substantially in archipelagic waters of the
Parties since 2004;
The FSMA effort is capped at 3,907 days but was exceeded
in both 2010 and 2011; and
US effort is being brought into the VDS, but is likely to
require an additional 2,460 days
Not accepted by all CCMs to the WCPFC
Source: Consultants’ analysis;
In response to the early experience with the VDS, including the shortfalls in performance, PNA is reviewing
amending the VDS Management Scheme to improve the Scheme including:
Implementing target and limit reference points for skipjack tuna, which take account of the catch
throughout the range of the stock;
Requiring FSMA vessels to cease fishing once the cap for days outside home Party waters is
exceeded in a Management Year;
Revising the VDS weighting limits to take account of the catch, with the possibility of introducing a
further limit on super seiners;
Revising the PAEs to take account of changes to the USMLT; and
Improving the trading mechanism between Parties to ensure all allocations are used within each
Management Year (MY).
3.6.4
Niue Treaty
The Niue Treaty on Cooperation in Fisheries Surveillance and Law Enforcement was adopted in 1993 and
all FFA Members, except Tokelau, are parties. The Agreement is legally a stand-alone Agreement
although it was adopted directly in response to Article 5 of the FFA Convention (calling for the promotion of
intra-regional coordination and cooperation in fisheries surveillance and law enforcement) and the FFA
has certain administrative responsibilities under the Treaty and so, in practice, taking account also of the
largely concurrent membership, the Treaty can be seen as a
de facto
subsidiary Agreement of FFA.
The Treaty is an Agreement on cooperation between FFA members on monitoring, control and surveillance
of fishing, and includes provisions on exchange of information and procedures for cooperation in
monitoring, prosecuting and penalising illegal fishing vessels. It is designed to complement the other
management frameworks in the region, and specifically defines its relationship to harmonized minimum terms
and conditions of access. Despite initial broad political support for the Treaty, there has to date been minimal
implementation of it. In recent years, however, there has been renewed interest resulting in the organisation
and implementation of joint deployment plans.
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3.6.5
Regional Organizations (FFA and SPC)
FFA and SPC play significant roles in the management framework for the fisheries under assessment because
of the support and services they provide both to PNA and the WCPFC.
3.6.5.1 Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA)
Based in Honiara, Solomon Islands, FFA's 17 members are Australia, Cook Islands, Federated States of
Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, New Zealand, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa,
Solomon Islands, Tokelau, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu. FFA was established to help countries sustainably
manage their fishery resources that fall within their 200 nautical mile Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs). FFA
is an advisory body providing expertise, technical assistance and other support to its members who make
sovereign decisions about their tuna resources and participate in regional decision making on tuna
management through agencies such as the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC).
The joint aim of members of the FFA is captured in its Vision Statement, which states:
“We, the Member Countries of the Forum Fisheries Agency, will enjoy the highest level of economic and social
benefits that is compatible with sustainable use of our tuna resources.”
Approximately 50 staff at the regional FFA headquarters in Honiara support their national contact points in
each member jurisdiction. FFA focuses its work on:
a) Fisheries management – providing policy and legal frameworks for the sustainable management
of tuna;
b) Fisheries development – developing the capacity of members to sustainably harvest, process and
market tuna to create livelihoods; and
c) Fisheries operations – supporting monitoring, control and surveillance of fisheries as well as treaty
administration, information technology and vessel registration and monitoring.
Within the overall FFA programme, the Fisheries Management Programme is designed to assist FFA
Members including PNA Parties, to refine and maintain effective policy and legal frameworks for the
sustainable management of their tuna fisheries resources. This programme provides advice on:
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
vi.
vii.
viii.
appropriate legal frameworks for national tuna management, including members’ obligations under
various treaties and arrangements;
appropriate fisheries management frameworks including the incorporation of the principles of
ecosystem based fisheries management;
effective fisheries administration, including access arrangements, licensing of foreign and domestic
fishing vessels, economic implications of different management systems, and the use of new systems
and technologies;
development and implementation of monitoring, control and surveillance systems and effective
compliance regimes;
assisting members to keep abreast of best practice fisheries management models, and develop
stronger and deeper regional co-operation in fisheries management;
providing effective oversight, and where appropriate management of a regional vessel register, vessel
monitoring system, and observer program;
servicing regional fisheries treaties and arrangements; and
improving capacity in fisheries management.
Two key instruments in the implementation of these programmes are:
1 the Regional Tuna Management and Development Strategy; and
2 the Regional Monitoring Control and Surveillance Strategy.
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In addition to providing services to FFA Members, FFA supports the WCPFC VMS through shared facilities
with the FFA VMS, providing establishment, maintenance, diagnostic and support infrastructure and services,
mobile transmission unit (MTU) or automatic location communicator (ALC) management services and
communication gateways for the Commission VMS, along with training for Commission staff.
3.6.5.2 Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC)
With its headquarters in Noumea, New Caledonia, the Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC) is an
intergovernmental organisation that provides technical and policy advice and assistance to its Pacific island
members. SPC was established as an international organisation in 1947 and has 26 member countries and
territories, including American Samoa, Australia, Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji Islands,
France, French Polynesia, Guam, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Niue,
Northern Mariana Islands, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Pitcairn Islands, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tokelau,
Tonga, Tuvalu, United States of America, Vanuatu and Wallis and Futuna.
SPC services are provided primarily in the form of technical assistance, training and research.
The governing body of SPC is the Conference of the Pacific Community, which is held every two years, with
each member entitled to one vote on decisions. However, debates are usually resolved in the Pacific way by
consensus. The Committee of Representatives of Governments and Administrations (CRGA) meets annually,
and in the years that the conference does not meet, is empowered to make decisions on the governance of
SPC.
The focus of SPC’s work changes over time in response to evolving regional needs and regional collaborative
arrangements with other organisations. In 2010, the organisation has six divisions.
One of those Divisions is the Fisheries, Aquaculture and Marine Ecosystems (FAME) Division which includes
the coastal fisheries and oceanic fisheries programmes, together with the project co-ordination unit of the
Coral Reef Initiative for the Pacific (CRISP). Within the FAME Division, the Oceanic Fisheries Programme
(OFP) aims "to
provide member countries with the scientific information and advice necessary to rationally
manage fisheries exploiting the region's resources of tuna, billfish and related species".
The OFP is the
WCPFC scientific services provider and a large portion of its scientific work is funded under the EDF
SCICOFISH programme functions
23
. It has three sections:
Statistics and Monitoring: including compilation of catch and effort data, data processing and technical
support for port sampling programmes and observer programmes in member countries and territories,
training in fisheries statistics and database management, statistical analyses and the provision of
statistical support to the WCPFC;
ii)
Tuna Ecology and Biology: including analysis of the biological parameters and environmental
processes that influence the productivity of tuna and billfish populations, focusing on age and growth,
movement and behaviour as observed from classical or electronic data archiving tags, and diet in a
more general study devoted to the food web of the pelagic ecosystem; and development of .
mathematical models to understand environmental effects of tuna fishery production, including
impacts of climate fluctuation; and
iii)
Stock Assessment and Modelling: including regional stock assessments, development of tuna
movement and simulation models, bio-economic modelling, National Fisheries Assessments and
scientific input to national tuna management plans and support for national Ecosystem Approach to
Fisheries Management (EAFM) analyses, tag-recapture database management.
i)
23
See http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/wcpfc-2010-dp33/eu-report-article-30-convention-and-resolution-2008-01
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The FAME Division Strategic Plan (2010-2013) (SPC, 2009) addresses three priority areas in ways that are
designed to be closely coordinated with, and contribute to WCPFC-level research outcomes as follows:
To provide high-quality scientific information and advice for regional and national fisheries
management authorities on the status of, and fishery impacts on, stocks targeted or otherwise
impacted by regional oceanic fisheries;
ii) To collect and analyse accurate and comprehensive scientific data for regional and national fisheries
management authorities on fisheries targeting the region’s resources of tuna, billfish and other oceanic
species; and
iii) To improve understanding of pelagic ecosystems in the western and central Pacific Ocean.
The building of national capacity to monitor fisheries, manage data, provide technical support to fisheries
management and participate meaningfully in regional management discussions is a cross-cutting priority.
The annual budget for the core scientific services for WCPFC was US$700,000 /
€573,770
for 2010, with additional funding for specific high priority activities.
3.7
3.7.1
i)
The Eastern Pacific Fishery: Status and Management issues
Status and management issues
Since the EU tuna fleet share fishing effort between the WCP area and the Eastern Pacific Ocean (EPO)
under the management of another RFMO (the IATTC), management and conservation rules adopted in the
EPO bear consequences on the fishing strategy of the EU fleet. This section is intended to briefly review the
main issues at stake in the EPO area and the likely consequences on the fishing possibilities available to the
EU tuna fleet.
The most recent evaluation (IATTC, 2011a) of stock status for tuna fisheries indicates that:
For yellowfin, MSY has been stable during the assessment period (1975-2010). However when a
stock-recruitment relationship is assumed, current effort is estimated to be above the level
corresponding to the MSY. There is uncertainty about recent and future levels of recruitment and
biomass, and there are retrospective patterns of overestimating recent recruitment;
For skipjack tuna, the main concern with the skipjack stock is the constantly increasing exploitation
rate. However, the data- and model-based indicators have yet to detect any adverse consequence of
this increase. The average weight was below its lower reference level in 2009, which can be a
consequence of overexploitation, but it can also be caused by recent recruitments being greater than
past recruitments. The continued decline in average length is a concern and, combined with levelling
off of catch and CPUE, may indicate that the exploitation rate is approaching or above the level
associated with MSY. The trend in many of the indicators changed in 2010, but it is uncertain what this
implies;
For bigeye tuna, the results indicate a recent recovery trend for bigeye tuna in the EPO (2005-2010),
subsequent to IATTC tuna conservation resolutions initiated in 2004. However, under the current
levels of fishing mortality, recent spikes in recruitment are predicted not to sustain this increasing
trend. There is however uncertainty about recent and future recruitment and biomass levels, and the
recent fishing mortality rates are estimated to be slightly above the level corresponding to MSY.
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The main management tool in force in the EPO for purse seine fisheries is a seasonal closure. In 2007, the
closure lasted approximately 1.5 month during the second half of the year. Given the need to further reduce
the catches, the scientific committee recommended in 2008 an extension of the seasonal closure to 12 weeks
(approx. 2.5 months) for the entire EPO with an additional closure of an offshore area located East of
Galapagos for a period of approx. 3.5 months. During the 79th meeting of IATTC in 2008, the parties could not
reach consensus and as a consequence, no management measures were adopted for 2008. At the 80th
meeting of the Commission held in June 2009, IATTC staff tabled the same recommendation and the parties
could finally agree on a 59 day closure in 2009, increased to 62 days in 2010 and 73 days in 2011. As
concerns the closure of the offshore area off Galapagos, the parties could only agree on a 1 month
moratorium, as opposed to the 109 days proposed by IATTC. At the most recent meeting, the 82nd meeting
held 4-8 July 2011, the IATTC agreed a multiannual programme for the conservation of tuna in the EPO for
2011-2013 (IATTC, 2011b). The measures agreed include: a 62-day closure period each year for purse seine
vessels; a closure of the fishery for yellowfin, bigeye, and skipjack tuna by purse-seine vessels within the area
of 96º and 110ºW and between 4°N and 3°S from 0000 hours on 29 September to 2400 hours on 29 October;
all purse-seine vessels must retain on board and then land all bigeye, skipjack, and yellowfin tuna caught,
except fish considered unfit for human consumption for reasons other than size (except for the last set of a
trip).
Additionally, IATTC regulates purse seining on tuna associated with dolphins to set annual limits of incidental
dolphin mortalities in the tuna purse-seine fishery in the Agreement area to levels approaching zero.
Association of tuna schools with dolphins is fairly frequent in the EPO unlike in the other oceanic regions.
Furthermore, IATTC imposes 100 % observer coverage of the larger purse seiners (includes all the EU purse
seiners) predominantly to monitor incidental catch of dolphins but also to collect scientific data and to monitor
compliance with IATTC management and conservation measures.
3.7.2
Issues of special concern to vessels fishing under the Kiribati FPA
Earlier comment has been made about the performance of Kiribati observers in the WCP. Additional comment
is necessary on the issue observers in the context of WCPFC and IATTC interplay. A MoU between the two
organisations was signed in 2011 to provide a cross endorsement of observers i.e. observers should be able
to cover both areas. However the MoU has not yet been implemented as the two secretariats do not agree on
the level of preparation and competency of observers, and further training is thus required. This means that
vessels have to have IATTC observers when fishing in the EPO and a WPCFC endorsed observer
24
when
crossing the 150 degree line. In practice this means they always have to have both observers onboard for any
trip where there is a chance of fishing in both areas. This requires vessel owners to have to pay for travel for
both observers.
A second issue affecting vessels operating under the Kiribati FPA, although not strictly a focus of this
evaluation, is the WCPFC and IATTC overlap, which requires vessels to implement both area management
provisions. This poses difficulties for vessel owners when such provisions are not harmonized i.e. closed
periods in the EPO do no coincide with the three month FAD ban in the WCP.
24
These observers are drawn from national observer programmes as there is currently no PNA/regional observer programme.
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3.8
3.8.1
Fleets fishing in the Kiribati EEZ
EU purse seine fleet
At present, the EU has three ongoing Fisheries Partnership Agreements in the WCP area, with the Republic
of Kiribati, the Federated States of Micronesia, and the Solomon Islands. These three partner countries are all
parties to the Palau Arrangement. The Spanish purse seine shipowner association (OPAGAC) has concluded
private agreements with Tuvalu (since 2009) and Tokelau (since 2011) and expects to conclude one with the
Cook Islands. An additional private agreement with Nauru has been allowed to lapse.
As outlined in the previous sections, the EU purse seine fleet is a minor operator in the WCPO with only
four vessels active and catches averaging below 29,000 tonnes per year (2007-2010). The EU purse
seiners represent around 2 % of the total purse seine fishery, which is dominated by fleets from Asia and
from Pacific island countries. The main fishing grounds of the European purse seine fleet remain the Indian
Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean, with catches in the WCPO accounting for 7.25 % of total EU purse seine
catches.
Table 11 presents EU zonal purse seine catches in the WCPO illustrating a Kiribati EEZ catch dependency of
43 % over the length of the FPA, and a HS dependency of 48 %. A small amount of catches occurred in
Tuvalu waters (between 3,000-4,400 tonnes in 2008 and 2010 respectively), and Solomon Islands (around
400-1,300 tonnes in the same years). High Seas dependency is linked to dependency on Kiribati for EU
vessels due to the fact that the Kiribati EEZ is split by High Seas areas.
Table 11: EU zonal purse seine catches in the WCPO (EEZ and HS) 2007-2010
Kiribati
Solomon Is
Tuvalu
High
Seas
0
0
3,240
4,411
1,913
7%
18,825
18,470
10,517
8,023
13,959
48%
Total
Kiribati
dependency
within WCPO
18%
48%
48%
53%
High
Seas
dependency
82%
51%
40%
27%
2007
2008
2009
2010
Average
%
Source: SPC.
4,133
17,308
12,806
15,717
12,491
43%
0
427
0
1,316
436
2%
22,958
36,205
26,563
29,468
28,799
100%
The fleet is very much a ‘central pacific fleet’ compared to many other fleets which operate more strongly in
either the EPO, or in the WCP. Catches in Kiribati are not constant during the year, and fleet movements are
mainly determined by fish migrations, but also by management measures, as can be seen in Figure 10. During
the FAD closure in Kiribati vessels tend to move to the east.
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Figure 10: Monthly catches by EU purse seine vessels for 2010 by species (tonnes)
Source: European Commission. (YFT: yellowfin tuna; SJJ: skipjack tuna; BET: bigeye tuna).
Species dependency shows a 73 % dependency on skipjack tuna, 13 % on bigeye tuna and 14 % on yellowfin
tuna (Table 12).
Table 12: EU purse seine species catch in the WCPO (EEZ and HS) 2006-2011.
Skipjack
2007
2008
2009
2010
Average (2006-2010)
Percent of total
Source: SPC.
15,354
25,553
19,677
20,517
17,890
73%
Yellowfin
4,322
4,789
3,070
4,040
3,382
14%
Bigeye
3,282
5,863
3.816
4,911
3,211
13%
Total
22,958
36,205
26,563
29,468
24,483
Table 13 illustrates a 47 % dependency and 46 % dependency on the Kiribati EEZ and HS. HS effort averaged
217 days over the period 2007 to 2010, exceeding the CMM 2008-01 (Table 2, Attachment B) effort limit of
103 days.
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Table 13: EU purse seine fishing days by zone (2007-2010)
Kiribati
2007
2008
2009
2010
Average
Percent of total
90
269
460
350
234
47%
Solomon Is
7
34
0
15
11
2%
Tuvalu
0
10
78
32
24
5%
HS
172
274
209
168
228
46%
Total
270
585
748
564
496
100%
Source: SPC. Note that contrary to SPC data, EU vessels are known to have fished in Solomon Islands in 2009.
The above data is sourced from SPCs, statistics unit.
Data from the Insituto Español Oceanografico (IEO) (Spain) are the official catch data for the purpose of the
FPA as agreed by both the EU and Kiribati. These data (agreed by the EU and Kiribati for 2007 to 2009), are
different to the data held by SPC (see Table 14). The reasons for these discrepancies are not well understood,
especially given that the EU provides data to the WCPFC, but EU fleet owners suggest
25
may in part be
explained by the fact that SPC relies on logbook and port sampling which does not always cover the landings
places of the fleets, and relies on some information from processors that may not be reliable (e.g. Bangkok
processors record bigeye as yellowfin if under 5kg), while the IEO in Spain get information from logbooks and
IATTC records that sample fish unloaded in Ecuador and processing information in Ecuador and El Salvador.
As a counter balance to this, SPC data is cross checked against observer reports and VMS data
26
.
Table 14: Catch statistics for EU fleet in Kiribati provided by different management organisations
(2007-2010)
EU /IEO
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Average
8,671
12,269
10,625
12,268
13,247
11,412
SPC
4,133
17,308
12,806
15,717
12,491
12,491
Source: IEO/ European Commission and SPC.
Estimates of catch dependency on the four Kiribati fishing zones are shown below. The table shows a
marginally higher dependency on the Line Islands (43 %), followed by roughly similar dependencies in the
Phoenix Islands (31 %) and the Gilbert Islands (26 %).
25
26
OPAGAC, Pers. Comm., February 2012
SPC-OFP Pers. Comm., February, 2012
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Table 15: EU catch by Kiribati zone (2007-2010)
2007
2008
2009
2010
Average
Average
dependency
Source: SPC.
3.8.2
Gilbert Islands
0
8,490
2,683
1,734
3,227
26%
Line Islands
1,689
2,995
7,370
9,409
5,366
43%
Phoenix Islands
2,444
5,824
2,753
4,574
3,899
31%
TOTAL
4,133
17,308
12,806
15,717
12,491
100%
EU longline fleet
The activities of the European longliners operating in the Pacific Ocean take place primarily south of 20°S,
outside the tropical area, targeting the swordfish stock. The fishing grounds overlap the area of competency
of both IATTC and WCPCF. Catches in the WCPO originate essentially from the high seas east of New
Zealand or from outside the EEZ of French Polynesia, but mainly as a continuation of fishing activities in the
Eastern Pacific area.
The EU longline fleet commenced its activities in 2003, consisting of 10-15 surface longliners, and attempted
to expand their fishing grounds towards zones in the Central South Pacific, with the area around 120º W
becoming a new fishing zone, as an alternative to supplement the traditional grounds located closer to the
South-America mainland in the SE Pacific. In 2004 and 2005 experimental fishery activities were undertaken
in areas located in both the North and South Pacific, within the WCPFC convention area, which may explain
why fishing authorisations were drawn under the FPA with Kiribati although no fishing has taken place inside
the Kiribati EEZ. These experimental fishery activities involved the development of fishing patterns that were
different from those used in routine commercial operations. Over the course of this activity, substantial differences
were found in terms of the prevalence among the species caught, in both the target species as well as the
bycatch species. The EU longliners returned to their traditional fishing grounds after estimating that the
continuation of their usual fishing strategy targeted on swordfish and oceanic sharks was more lucrative than
trying to enter and compete on the equatorial longline fishery for sashimi or albacore dominated by Asian
interests. The number of vessels operating in this fishery fell to 6 in 2010 (WCPFC, 2010).
3.8.3
Non-EU distant water fishing activity in the Kiribati EEZ
Distant water nations and FSMA vessels both have a strong dependency on the Kiribati EEZ. Fleet
dependencies may of course vary from year to year, but the US, Korea and Taiwan, together with the EU,
make up two thirds of the average annual catch (Table 16), and FSMA vessels a further 20 %, including the
four vessels registered in Vanuatu. These FSMA vessels, whilst registered in Kiribati, operate throughout PNA
waters, and have no specific links to onshore activities.
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Table 16: Catches of tuna (tonnes) by DWFN and FSMA purse seine and longline vessels in the
Kiribati EEZ
2007
Purse seine
DWFN
US
Korea
Taiwan
EU
Vanuatu
Ecuador
New Zealand
El Salvador
China
Japan
Total Distant Water
FSMA
Marshall Is
Papua New Guinea
Kiribati
Tuvalu
FS Micronesia
Total FSMA
Total Purse seine
Longline
Korea
Taiwan
China
Vanuatu
Japan
US
Kiribati
Total
Pole and line
Japan
Kiribati
Total
Source: SPC.
2008
2009
2010
23,053
57,657
11,915
4,133
11,090
7,143
8,611
2,203
365
2,086
128,256
28,379
12,882
1,136
0
107
42,504
170,760
6,886
678
46
652
46
8,309
250
250
45,466
66,202
20,265
17,308
9,563
20,226
3,885
7,818
3,521
5,089
199,343
7,307
19,265
0
0
1,818
28,390
227,733
4,958
900
15
268
-
51
6,192
621
621
87,500
92,692
38,059
12,806
15,257
3,344
6,531
6,064
1,907
3,007
267,166
19,251
26,078
3,432
2,525
1,646
52,932
320,098
3,766
573
1,376
500
114
-
6,329
450
160
610
64,721
53,381
26,661
15,717
5,120
6,033
5,144
4,268
1,252
55
182,352
19,582
19,835
12,160
2,000
1,967
55,544
237,897
3,766
340
2
26
4,134
22
22
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Table 17: Summary of foreign vessels licensed to fish in Kiribati waters, 2011
Country
Purse seine
28
26
11
4
7
17
3
2
1
35
37
2
6
10
1
Longline
Pole & line
Vessel numbers
112
0
48
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
8
0
0
0
0
0
75
0
9
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Korea
Taiwan
PNG
EU
Ecuador
Vanuatu
New Zealand
El Salvador
China
Japan
USA
Kiribati
FS
Micronesia
Marshall Is
Tuvalu
Source: MFMRD.
Additional data on catches by species and country for both purse seine and longline vessels are provided in
Appendix H.
Kiribati historically has operated bilateral arrangements with 9 fishing nations, as well as being a participant in
the USMLT. Specific agreement details are not available due to the confidential nature of the settlements,
even though the consultants have made attempts to obtain such information. However, based on a number of
indicators provided, it is possible to extract an estimate of the values by fleet segment (Table 18).
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Table 18: Estimates of annual average licence revenues accrued to Kiribati in the period 2009-2011
Number of purse seine vessels covered by agreements (excluding USMLT and
139
EU: (Korea, Japan, Taiwan, China, New Zealand, Ecuador, El Salvador, USA)
Number of longline vessels covered by agreements (Korea)
Number of pole and line vessels covered by agreements (Japan)
Average licence access fee per longline vessel (AUS$ /
€)
Average licence access fee per pole and line vessel (AUS$ /
€)
Average fee per non EU purse seine vessel (AUS$ /
€)
Estimated fees from longline ‘000s (AUS$ /
€)
Estimated fees from pole and line ‘000s (AUS$ /
€)
Estimated fees from non EU purse seine ‘000s (AUS$ /
€)
EU fees from purse seiners ‘000s (AUS$ /
€)
Average annual income (2009-2011) all vessels ‘000s (AUS$ /
€)
Average fee/tonne (11,447t) caught for EU purse seine vessels (AUS$ /
€)
Average fee/tonne (194,279t) caught for other purse seines (AUS$ /
€)
Average fee/day (396 non-adjusted days) (adjusted for PNA weighting (1.5)) for
EU purse seine vessels (AUS$ /
€)
Average fee/day (4,657 days) (adjusted for PNA weighting for other purse seine
(AUS$)
112
4
40,000 / 26490
40,000 / 26,490
201,000 / 133,133
4,500 / 2,980
160 / 106
25,293 / 16,750
1,919/ 1,271
31,872 / 21,107
160 / 106
130 / 86
3,299 / 2,185
5,431 / 3,597
Source: Consultants’ calculations. Notes: EU fees/figures average of 2009 to 2011 using provisional catch data for 2011,
and based on SPC catch data and European Commission records of payments. Average X-R conversion of
€1
= AUS
1.51 for 2009-2011.
Table 18 shows that EU purse seiners have been paying roughly the same as other fleets on a per tonne
basis. The table also shows that the EU fleet paid AUS$ 2,788 (€2,050) per weighted vessel day, as compared
with AUS$ 5,431 (€3,993) paid by other fleets.
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A number of access agreements have been secured for 2012 which are all now based on Vessel Days. These
are with Korea (1,235 vessel days), Taiwan (240 vessel days), and New Zealand (185 vessel days). These
agreements are up to and including December 2012. All the access fees have been based on the PNA MoU of
US$ 5,000/Vessel Day (PNA, 2011). Additional agreements are expected to be concluded with China and
Japan in 2012, ending December 2012. As of March 2012, 2,790 days remained unallocated with the EU,
Vanuatu, Taiwan, El Salvador and Ecuador still to negotiate access rights. It is noteworthy that Kiribati has a
PAE of 5,450 Vessel Days (Table 9) which are likely to be undersubscribed. This potentially represents
additional access opportunities for EU purse seine (and other), or provides Kiribati with the opportunity to trade
unused days with other Parties within the PNA. However, it also unclear as to how additional USMLT days
may be accommodated, but it is believed that the current USMLT is requesting a contribution from Kiribati of
1,000 days. The negotiations presently stand at 7,000 Vessel Days from PNA. Kiribati’s Minister has stated
that all agreements will follow the PNA MoU on renewal
27
.
The use of PAE days by foreign fleets in Kiribati is shown in the table below.
Table 19: Use of Kiribati PAE days, 2007 to 2010
VDS
weighting
1.1
1.0
1.0
1.5
1.2
1.3
1.0
1.3
1.0
1.0
Average PAE
days
allocated,
Current
2007-2010
uptake
1,679
1000
1,622
1235
898
240
195
225
162
176
185
108
94
89
5,246
2,660
Fleet
USA
Korea
Taiwan
EU
Vanuatu
Ecuador
New Zealand
El Salvador
China
Japan
Grand Total
2007
680
1,448
447
90
347
207
239
114
8
63
4,716
2008
1,596
1,570
866
269
257
350
135
173
159
189
6,518
2009
2,567
2,063
1,210
460
264
104
204
131
119
100
8,698
2010
Average
2,544
1,847
1,406
1,622
1,067
898
350
292
168
259
167
207
127
176
122
135
89
94
2
89
7,756
5,618
Kiribati PAE
5450
5450
Unallocated
days
204
2,790
Source: SPC. Note that given that there was no allocation of VDS for the EU, the average figure of 195 in the table
above for the EU is only an indicative figure for the purposes of this calculation.
3.8.4
Domestic sector
As noted earlier in this report, a very large percentage of the Kiribati population is engaged in small-scale
fishing of some form or another, either commercially or on a subsistence basis. Whilst there are a number of
vessels registered in Kiribati, there is no domestically based industrial tuna fleet. Small-scale fishing activities
are concentrated around, but not exclusively based in, Tarawa where market conditions are better than in
other parts of the country, and where the majority of the country’s population is based. Catches are comprised
of a mix of both tuna and reef fish, and are mainly made by small-scale vessels of under 7m in length.
27
Minister of Fisheries Kiribati, Pers. Comm., February 2012.
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Some tunas, and non-target species, such as rainbow runners, trigger fish and mahi-mahi, are also provided
by purse seiners when offloading. These are sold through the agents, CPP through its domestic retail shops in
Tarawa.
Domestic (small-scale and industrial) activity, along with the activities of visiting industrial vessels generates a
certain amount of a) upstream activity in terms of vessels repairs, fuel, engines, b) unloading/transshipment
services e.g. stevedores, and c) some downstream marketing/trading activity of domestically caught fish, and
of sales of bycatch by foreign-flagged vessels.
Sales of bycatch from EU purse seine vessels can have some impacts on domestic market prices given the
quantities involved, and the authorities are reported to be investigating methods of storing such catch so as to
better release it onto the market more slowly and during periods of low domestic catches.
Chinese owners are also in the process of building a loining plant to cater for longline caught tunas. It is
unlikely whether this will absorb landings from purse seiners, as the distribution chains are distinctly different.
This activity will still however provide employment for up to 70 workers, and may provide an additional source
for some food fish for the domestic economy.
Generally however, there is no tuna processing activity in Kiribati of any commercial scale. The costs of
processing tuna (especially into cans) would mean that resulting sales would probably not be able to compete
with processing locations elsewhere in the world (e.g. Bangkok) given both low labour productivity and the
costs of production (e.g. cans, oil, power, cartons, water, etc.), which would be high given the need to import
most inputs and the remote location of Kiribati.
3.9
3.9.1
Fisheries governance in Kiribati
Policy and institutional framework
The Kiribati Development Plan (KDP) defines the policy focus as a:
Need to maximize sustainable economic benefits from the tuna resource;
Need to conserve coastal resources in the face of rising demand for food and cash incomes; and
Managing the transition from government research to commercial production and export.
Other policy areas emphasize the need for:
Private commercial investment in marine and mineral resources and tourism;
Strengthening the agricultural and fisheries extension service;
Identifying most promising income-earning opportunities in outer islands and demonstrate commercial
feasibility;
Identifying participatory development strategies to manage increasing risk and design; and
Cost effective adaptation.
Overriding governance priorities are identified as:
Maintaining close collaboration with the PNA and FFA and to obtain maximum sustainable EEZ
access fees promote public-private partnerships with reputable foreign investors in catching and
onshore domestic processing of tuna;
Conducting participatory education programmes with fishers and communities engaged with
vulnerable species/stocks; and
Ensuring legal sanctions are observed to enforce conservation regime and prosecute when
necessary.
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The Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources Development (MFMRD) is responsible for the definition of
fisheries policy in Kiribati. It has five core Divisions and a staff of about 115:
Fisheries Division;
The Mineral Division (Management of Mineral resources);
Resource Economics and Policy Division;
Accounts, Administration and Human Resources Division; and
Information Technology.
Staff from the Ministry’s Fisheries Division represent the country at WCPFC, PNA and Forum Fisheries
Committee (FFC) meetings, but higher level meetings (e.g. FFC and PNA) and meetings where there are
Ministerial forums and binding decisions, may also be attended by the Minister and the MFMRD Permanent
Secretary.
The Ministry is solely responsible for negotiating access agreements, but does so in consultation with the
Minister of Fisheries. This task falls to the responsibility of the Resource Economics and Policy Division. This
Division provides the management services that ensure planned results of the ministry are achieved. Its
services include policy and planning, statistics, progress monitoring, asset maintenance, financial and human
resource management. In addition to negotiating fisheries agreements, this Division deals with collection and
formulation of project requirements from the other fisheries units and other projects identified priority for further
submission for public funding and donor support. The unit is also responsible for monitoring projects such as
the development components as specified in the annual recurrent budget, the Aus Aid Incentive Fund
programme (see Box 2), and the implementation of sectoral policy/promotion of sustainability as specified in
the EU/Kiribati FPA. The management of the EU funds is dealt with under budget issues.
Each of the five Divisions reports to the Permanent Secretary, and ultimately to the Fisheries Minister.
The Fisheries Division (FD), under the auspices of the MFMRD, is specifically responsible for the exploration,
exploitation, development, utilisation, proper management and conservation of fisheries and marine resources
encompassed within the EEZ. The long-term goal of the division is to maximize returns from these resources
and ensures that resources are being utilized on a sustainable basis to ensure the attainment and continued
satisfaction of human needs for the present and future generations of Kiribati. The FD consists of three
principal sections (Figure 11), Oceanic Fisheries, Coastal Fisheries and Mariculture and Aquaculture.
Oceanic Fisheries is divided into two units - the Licensing unit, and the Monitoring, Control and Surveillance
unit. The main objectives of the latter are to generate revenue from Kiribati marine resources through fishing
access, to generate employment for workers on fishing vessels, manage the marine resources on a
sustainable basis, and to carry out enforcement duties to protect the country’s marine resources. To achieve
these objectives the unit is tasked to carry out and to accomplish the following:
Securing of fisheries access agreements with foreign partners;
To carry out observer placements on foreign vessels to carry out scientific data collection on catch and
gear technology;
To implement the VMS Register and monitor the system;
Registration and Licensing of Foreign fishing Vessels;
Promoting of employment opportunities on foreign fishing vessels;
Cooperating in monitoring, control and surveillance at regional and national level;
Maintenance of the Unit’s fisheries database management information system, simply known as
(Fisheries Monitoring Information System (FMIS); and
To carry out port sampling work to verify catches made by fishing vessels, and disseminating of
information.
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Fisheries statistics form a component of this Unit, concentrating in the collection and analysis of relevant
fisheries data. All purse seine and longline catch data is entered from the vessel logbooks onto the SPC Tuna
Fisheries Database Management System (TUFMAN) data base.
Legal Counsel is seconded permanently from the Attorney General’s office for drafting and implementing
prosecutions.
Coastal Fisheries: This section inputs into the work of the Fisheries Division by monitoring of the fish resources
through the collection of relevant fisheries data and surveys, monitoring of the export activities through the
collection of fisheries data and issuance of commercial inshore licenses (<12 nautical miles), promoting the
utilisation of marine products in a sustainable manner, providing assistance to local fishermen in the
development of the fisheries on the island, monitoring fisheries ponds and compliance with closed areas.
Data are collected from commercial and subsistence fishermen where they fish mainly in the lagoon, reef and
the ocean areas within 12 nautical miles. Other data of equal importance are compiled from the private fishing
enterprises, fish and marine exporters that export their product overseas, marine products send from the outer
islands to Tarawa and marine products send overseas as personal consignments.
This section also undertakes training for the fisheries staff both internally and at overseas institutions including
training fishermen in the rural areas in the form of workshops. In addition, the section is also tasked with
dissemination of fisheries related information to the general public in the form of posters, pamphlets, radio
announcement and videos.
A unit also operates the Kiritimati Fisheries Development Branch which supports coastal fishers. The Gilbert
Islands are also supported by Fisheries Assistants.
Mariculture and Aquaculture: The objectives of this section are to conduct research on marine resources that
have potential for development and to coordinate collaborative research activities with regional research
organisations. Past and current research activities include:
Clam growth for the aquarium trade;
Creation of a bêche de mer hatchery, site selection and management;
The Seaweed Growth Monitoring Programme, which investigates
Eucheuma
seaweed growth rates at
various locations and under various conditions with the aim of determining optimum sites and
seasonality for farming;
Giant clam stock assessment, including plans to investigate the potential for farming.
The section’s Aquaculture Unit is also involved in research aimed at eradicating tilapia from the Tarawa
milkfish ponds.
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Figure 11: Fisheries Division organisation chart
Director of Fisheries
Principal Fisheries Officer
Aquaculture
Principal Fisheries Officer
Oceanic Fisheries
Principal Fisheries Officer
Coastal Fisheries
Senior Fisheries Officer
Licensing
Senior Fisheries Officer
Licensing
Senior Fisheries Officer
MCS
Support Staff
1 x Fisheries Assistant
2 x Field Assistant
Support Staff
1 x Fisheries Officer
3 Data Technician
Support Staff
1 x VMS Officer, 2 x MCS Officer,
1 x Observer Coordinator
Senior Fisheries Officer
Development and Planning
Senior Fisheries Officer
Extension (Support to Outer Islands
Senior Fisheries Officer
Statistics
Senior Fisheries Officer
Research
Senior Fisheries Officer
Training
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3.9.2
Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources Development (MFMRD) Budget
The national budget is sourced from two elements: the budget to cover recurrent costs appropriated from
Parliament; and the development budget covered to a large part by donor contributions. These are divided into
two accounts (No 1 and No 4). Account No 1 deals with recurrent fund expenditure for each Ministry, whilst
account No 4 deals with Development expenditure. As EU contributions are divided into payment for access
and support for development, the access fees (including payments by the fishery sector) are fed into account
No 1, and the development contributions for sectoral policy fed into account No 4. The MFMRD budget is also
divided into recurrent and development budgets. MFMRD recurrent and development budgets were
AUS$1.85 mn /
€1.37
mn in 2011, then reduced to AUS$1.3 mn /
€1
mn in 2012. The development budget
was around AUS$ 4 mn /
€2.9
mn in 2011 with an anticipated increase to AUS$4.1 mn /
€3
mn in 2012.
Table 20: MFMRD Expenditure Framework, 2011 and 2012 (AUS$ and €)
2011
Description
Recurrent fund
expenditure
Salaries and staff
amenities
Travel
Direct purchases
Services and hire of
plant
Utilities
Other
Total Recurrent Budget
Development fund
expenditure
Fisheries Observer
scheme
Nonouti fish centre
Donor development
projects
EU sectoral policy
Total Development
Budget
Total FPA EU
payments as % of Total
Development Budget
Source: MFMRD.
AUS$
1,270,543
134,205
42,500
135,000
178,124
90,993
1,851,365
882,322
93,198
29,514
93,750
123,697
63,190
1,285,670
AUS$
972,013
34,148
22,500
224,662
52,588
2012
Notes
720,010
25,295
16,667
166,416
38,954
-
967,341
Around 65% of total costs
are attributed to MFMRD
activities
1,305,911
560,000
177,014
2,911,686
375,970
4,024,670
388,889
122,926
2,022,004
261,090
2,794,910
31%
560,000
177,014
3,000,000
375,970
4,112,984
414,815
131,121
2,222,222
278,496
3,046,655
29%
Government of Kiribati
Government of Kiribati
Other external funds
Of all the fisheries access agreements, only two specify development support components: the USMLT allows
for a development component of 15 %; and the FPA. The development budget was also the recipient of the
Australian Incentive Fund in 2010 and 2011. The Development budget may also be supported by some
contributions from national recurrent expenditure for specific activities such as the Nonouti Fisheries Centre.
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3.9.3
National Fisheries Laws
Fisheries management in Kiribati is governed by the Act for Conservation, Management and Development of
Kiribati Fisheries and Control of Foreign Fishing and for Connected Purposes (the Act), 2010.
The Act’s objectives are to:
Promote the sustainable management of fisheries of Kiribati and the development of the use of
fisheries resources for the benefit of Kiribati, including the recovery of fees that reflect the value of the
resource; and
Protect marine stocks and the environment of Kiribati.
The Act lays down provision for the development of fisheries management plans which comply with the
following requirements:
Specifying the management and development strategies to be adopted;
Providing for a scheme of licensing and if necessary other appropriate license measures;
Specifying the license regime to be applied including limitations to be applied to local fishing
operations and the amount of fishing to be allocated to foreign fishing vessels;
Specifying information and other data needs to be provided by persons licensed to fish for that fishery;
and
Taking into account any relevant traditional fishing methods and practices.
When preparing a management plan, the Fisheries Director must consult with appropriate government
ministers and departments, as well as fishermen, local authorities and other persons affected by the plan.
Kiribati has a draft management plan for tuna, but this has not been formerly adopted.
The Act lays down the basis for penalties for infringements which may be in the range of AUS$50,000 /
€37,037
to AUS$1 mn /
€740,740.
Contraventions of the conditions of a license for foreign fishing vessels are
$250,000 /
€185,185
for the ship’s master, and $1 mn /
€740,740
for the owner (or charterers).
Foreign fishing vessel licenses provide for fishing in Kiribati waters, loading, unloading and transshipping in
Kiribati waters, and loading and unloading fuel supplies in Kiribati waters.
The Act specifies compliance with various international treaties including WCPFC CMMs, the Nauru
Agreement and the Niue Treaty. These are implemented into Law following agreement at international
(WCPFC) and regional (PNA) levels, and are binding. PNA Implementation Arrangements are underwritten by
Ministerial Memorandums of Understanding, and transposed into the licensing regulations through the
Minimum Terms and Conditions. However, despite agreeing to the amendments to the Third Implementation
Agreement, Kiribati has been very slow to implement the required changes.
Foreign licensing conditions are provided in the license schedule by the Minimum Terms and Conditions, as
advised by FFA (Box 4). These are required to specify compliance with the CMMs, the Nauru arrangement
(and its subsidiary and associated arrangements) and any specific national measures.
The Act is currently being revised to include three additional amendments:
To extend Kiribati’s authorities legal jurisdiction to act on infringements in the HSPs – an evaluation of
the legal basis for this within international law is not within the scope of this evaluation, but changes to
the Act are motivated by the wish by the Kiribati authorities to ensure that it’s Act enables it to act on
behalf of WCPFC, primarily through providing for powers for inspection on the High Seas, and
participation of observers;
Strengthening the provision to include the implementation of the PNA 3 IAs; and
Allowing for use of evidence and actions by non-Kiribati actions in enforcing fisheries regulations.
The Act is likely to be submitted for approval by Parliament in April, 2012.
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3.9.4
Specific national marine protected area measures
Kiribati has established the Phoenix Islands Protected Area (PIPA) which is the largest marine protected areas
(MPA) in the Pacific islands at 408,250 km². In addition, there are 11 MPAs in Kiribati, totalling 590 km² in area
(Table 21).
Table 21: Marine Protected Areas in Kiribati
Designation
Closed Area
Name
Cook Islet Closed Area
2°00’N
157°20’W
3
(Kiritimati WS)
Motu Tabu Islet Closed Area
Ia
2°00’N
157°20’W
1
(Kiritimati WS)
Motu Upua Closed Area
Ia
2°00’N
157°20’W
4
Ngaontetaake Islet Closed Area Ia
2°00’N
157°20’W
2
(Kiritimati WS)
North-west Point Closed Area
DE
2°00’N
157°20’W
13
(Kiritimati WS)
Wildlife
Birnie Island
IV
3°35’S
171°33’W
20
sanctuary
Kiritimati
UA
2°00’N
157°20’W
32,100
Malden Island (Closed Area)
Ia
4°03’S
155°01’W
3,930
McKean Island
IV
3°35’S
174°02’W
57
Phoenix Island (Rawaki)
IV
3°42’S
170°43’W
6,500
Starbuck Island (Closed Area)
IV
5°37’S
155°56’W
16,200
Vostock Island
IV
10°06’S
152°23’W
24
Relevant IUCN MPA categories are as follows: Ia: Strict Nature Reserve: protected area managed mainly for science; IV
Habitat/Species Management Area: protected area managed mainly for conservation through management intervention;
UA Unassigned.
Source: IUCN database (http://www.unep-wcmc.org/protected_areas/data/pacific.htm).
IUN
Category
Ia
Latitude
Longitude
Size (ha)
PIPA is nearly uninhabited and encompasses eight atolls, each with a 60 nautical mile protected perimeter,
and two submerged reef systems. More than 120 species of coral and 520 species of reef fish have been
identified in the area, as well as dolphins, sea turtles, and healthy seabird populations. It contains a near
pristine coral archipelago with abundant marine and bird life, and is the first MPA in the region with deep sea
habitat, including underwater mountains. The Republic of Kiribati and the New England Aquarium (NEA)
developed the Phoenix Islands project over several years of joint scientific research and discussions, with
funding and technical assistance from the Global Conservation Fund at Conservation International (CI) and,
more recently, CI’s Pacific islands Program.
Under a MoU signed by Kiribati, the NEA and CI
28
, management and enforcement of PIPA will be financed
through an endowment system that will cover the core recurring management costs and compensate the
Kiribati government for the foregone commercial fishing license revenues. The size of the endowment will
depend on the value of the fisheries to be closed, as well as projected PIPA administration costs; the final
figure is being researched. The endowment is projected to last in perpetuity, assuming management of the
protected area is administered in good faith by the Kiribati government.
Although a management plan for the site is not expected to be set for another year or so, it is anticipated that
commercial inshore reef fishing, including by foreign vessels, may be banned in the PIPA. Subsistence reef
fishing by the fewer than 50 residents of the Phoenix Islands archipelago will be allowed to continue. The PIPA
also includes deep water, and it is unclear yet whether commercial fishing for offshore resources, like tuna, will
28
Exact data unknown
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be allowed. A review of the VMS tracts around Phoenix Island illustrates very high levels of dependency by EU
vessel on this area. This is also highlighted in Table 15.
The consultants sought additional information from MFMRD about the status of plans for the PIPA without
success, despite continued requests for clarification. However, MFMRD have stated that the President is
supportive of PIPA, and a working group has been established. Currently 7 of the 8 atolls are fully protected as
no take zones inclusive of terrestrial environments, lagoons, coral reefs and coastal habitat out to 12 nautical
miles (22 km; 14 mi). One atoll, Kanton, has permissible harvest of resources for subsistence purposes only,
for the government caretaker population. In Phase 2, it is reported that no take zones (NTZs) are to be
increased by an additional 25 %. Priorities for an increase in no-take zones include full protection of the two
submerged reefs and increasing protection of seamounts and around each atoll/reef island. No coordinates for
PIPA were provided despite requests by the consultants.
3.9.5
Monitoring, control and surveillance
The core components of the Kiribati MCS system are:
A complement of 100 observers, 90 based in Tarawa and up to 10 at Kiritimati;
A MCS system, designed and supported by FFA;
Enforcement officers, to monitor transshipments and landings; and
A Fishery Patrol Vessel
29
, managed by the Maritime Police.
Additional support is provided by the US Coastguard (Ship Rider), once or twice per year, and the New
Zealand Royal Air Force, for occasional over-flights.
Kiribati also participates, along with other Pacific countries (Tuvalu, RMI, FSM and Solomon Is) in specific joint
exercises. The last such exercise was
Operation Kuru Kuru.
Usual non-compliance issues are reported to relate to fishing without a license (a common occurrence with
longliners); and transshipping on the High Seas (again by longliners).
A specific problem as reported by the Kiribati authorities found with purse seiners has been the non-
compliance with the no discards rule. Observers are noting very high levels of discards from FAD related
fisheries, particularly from EU vessels. This is in contravention of the CMM 2008-01. Observers are reporting
these during debriefing sessions, and the authorities are in the process of reviewing prospective actions for
any further breaches
3031
. It should be noted however that the European Commission and the shipowners have
not received copies of observer reports (an issue raised by the EU in WCFPC meetings with the EU having co-
sponsored proposals with other long-distance fishing nations to reinforce the obligation to submit reports), and
the European Commission has not been notified of any breaches in the regulations by EU vessels on which it
could be expected to act. Earlier text (Section 3.6.1 page 27/28) has also already noted that the 2011 WCPFC
3rd Annual report for the regional observer programme highlighted that 57 % of observer trip reports due had
not been submitted by Kiribati.
One Australian-built Forum Class small patrol boat called
Teanoai.
The
Teanoai
was commissioned in 1994 and displaces 162
tons. The vessel has a top speed of 20 knots and is berthed at Bairiki Island in the Tarawa Atoll, part of the Gilbert Islands
30
Director MFMRD, Pers. Comm., February, 2012
29
The consultants interviewed both observers and Observer de-briefers on general compliance and reporting issues. Non-
compliance of the no discards rule was raised by both, and by other officials.
31
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There have also been prosecutions of purse seiners discarding during transshipment, including one EU
vessel; and non-reporting of catch in the logbook. No specific examples of the nationality of vessels were cited
for the latter.
The Kiribati authorities are also aware of non-compliance on high seas fishing day restriction by EU vessels.
However, this is not technically the subject of this evaluation, and is a matter for the EU and the relevant
national competent authority.
Strengths of the MCS system in Kiribati are
32
:
High compliment of observers operating in the EEZ and the high seas on behalf of the WCPFC;
Strong commitment and understanding of observers; and
A functioning VMS system covering the EEZ.
Weaknesses in the MCS system are:
Due to its extent, much of the Kiribati EEZ, as with most Pacific EEZs, goes unpatrolled;
Insufficient financial resources to undertake the required duties, e.g. fuel for the fisheries patrol vessel;
A need to strengthen the compliment of Fishery Officers;
A need to strengthen the observer debriefing process so as to more readily detect non-compliance,
e.g. with the no discards rule;
A need to establish a core nucleus of Senior Observers, from the existing pool, to assist this process;
and
Network issues associated with the VMS
33
.
Issues such as weaknesses in the observer reporting system have been noted. However, MFRDB appear to
have responded to criticism and are scanning and dispatching observer reports on a regular basis. The main
weakness with the observer operations, as mentioned above, is the need to increase the capacity of observer
debriefers.
The functionality and strength of the MCS system has been complimented by a change to the Act, including an
increase in penalties of up to $1 mn /
€740,740
or imprisonment for up to 10 years, for the serious offences
such as fishing without a licence or transhipping without authorisation.
There are several key aspects of monitoring, control and surveillance and enforcement authorities and actions
that are addressed in the Act. These include the authorities of Authorized (Fisheries) Officers to stop, board,
inspect, or search the vessel; examine and take notes of all documents, gear and fish, processing or other
activities; monitor fishing and processing operations; take samples; request licenses or other documents;
direct the vessel to port or other area; arrest, detain, or seize articles as evidence (the vessel, gear, fish or
other evidence such as poisons, explosives, etc.) with the provision of a receipt; or other lawful enforcement
activities. The officer has authority to detain and arrest a vessel, master and crew
within fisheries limits, where
he/she has reasonable and probable grounds that an offence has been committed,
but not outside those
waters in a “hot pursuit” situation. The Authorised Officer is protected from obstruction, and is non-liable for
actions completed in the pursuit of their lawful duties. The standard activities leading up to, during, and
following proceedings are addressed in the Act, e.g., jurisdiction of the courts, seizure of evidence and goods,
detention, release on bond, disposal of seized goods such as forfeiture, and release of goods on a finding of
“not guilty”.
32
33
The consultants have been unable to report specifically on issues relating to traceability
A report by MRAG (2009) identified network issues as an MCS problem. The consultants interviewed the VMS monitoring officer
who stated that the network issues, whilst not perfect had improved considerably, with close to 24/7 coverage
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Kiribati has no intention to implement an electronic reporting system and has not made provision for this in
their revised Fisheries Act.
3.9.6
Catch certification
The implementation of the EU Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) Catch Certificate Scheme (CCS) is
laid down in Council Regulation EC 1005/2008 and subsequent legislation for third countries exporting marine
fisheries products to the EU. While there are no fisheries exports from Kiribati straight to the EC, there are
nonetheless obligations and best practices for Kiribati in terms of flag State duties, port State duties, and
coastal State duties pertaining to implementation of the CCS. The European Union has not yet published the
flag State notification of Kiribati. Hence, Kiribati cannot validate EU catch certificates for fishery products which
are exported directly or indirectly to the EU. The fish stemming from Kiribati vessels exported for processing to
a third State (e.g. Ecuador) cannot be re-exported to the EU after processing as the processed fishery product
would still need to be accompanied by a catch certificate validated by the Kiribati authorities.
For product transshipped from the four EU purse seine vessels on land at Tarawa, the Kiribati competent
authority should sign section 7 of the catch certificate through which they will confirm that the transshipment
operation has taken place and such operation was authorised in accordance with its internal legislation and/or
relevant conservation and management measures approved by a regional fisheries management organisation
to which the third country is a contracting party or a cooperating party
34
. For product transshipped at sea in
Christmas island, the two masters of the fishing and carrier vessel should sign section 6 of the catch
certificate, if such an operation is allowed under the Kiribati waters or under the relevant international rules.
Assisting the Kiribati authorities to comply with the IUU regulation will shortly be the subject of a technical
assistance project provided under the EU IUU Regulation Project (Accompany Developing Countries in
complying with the implementation of Regulation 1005/2008 on IUU fishing – CRIS Number 2010/248-130 –
and its one year extension).
More details on how to fill-in the EU catch certificate can be found in Section 5.16 of the handbook:
http://ec.europa.eu/fisheries/cfp/illegal_fishing/info/handbook_original_en.pdf
34
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4
4.1
EX-POST EVALUATION SPECIFIC TO THE PROTOCOL OF THE FISHERIES
PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
Introduction to the Fisheries Partnership Agreement
The EU has three Fisheries Partnership Agreements (FPAs) with ‘third countries’ in the Pacific. As with all
FPAs, the Pacific FPAs have multiple objectives including: supporting responsible fisheries; better use of EU
fleet capacity; creation of employment and value-addition both in the EU and in third countries; provision of
product to the EU processing industry; and contribution to EU market supplies. The first Pacific FPA entered
into force in 2003 with Kiribati, and was renegotiated in 2006, entered into force on the 30 April 2008, and runs
from 16 September 2006 to 15 September 2012 (EC 893/2007
35
). The current FPA with Kiribati is thus the
second such FPA between the EU and Kiribati. In addition, in 2004 the EU negotiated FPAs with the Solomon
Islands (renegotiated in 2009) and the Federated States of Micronesia (Protocol negotiated in 2010 but not yet
in force). These FPAs provide for Spanish, Portuguese and French vessels to operate within the waters of the
third countries.
All the current FPAs are complementary and reinforce and strengthen the EU’s strategy to create a network of
tuna fishing opportunities for EU fishing vessels in the Pacific Ocean. The FPAs are focussed on promoting
partnership arrangements, which secure access for EU vessels to the highly migratory species (and in
particular to yellowfin tuna, bigeye tuna and skipjack tuna), while at the same time providing financial
contribution for access and support to fisheries sectoral policy.
These FPAs and related Protocols are in line with the Council Conclusions on the Fisheries Partnership
Agreements (EC, Com 2002/637/final
36
) and separate financial contribution for access rights, and support for
sectoral fisheries policy of the third country. The current annual EU financial contribution to Kiribati under the
existing Protocol is set
€478,000.
This is comprised of 6,400 reference tonnes at
€65/tonne,
plus sectoral
support of
€62,400
i.e. 15 % of the total payments. Out of the total financial contribution of
€478,000,
however,
30 % is devoted to supporting sectoral fisheries policy, with a view to promoting responsible and sustainable
fisheries in Kiribati waters in the first year. During the second year of the Protocol, this percentage increases to
40 %, and to 60 % the following years. The Protocol covers a reference tonnage of 6,400 tonnes of tuna per
year and fishing opportunities for 4 purse seiners (3 from Spain and 1 from France) and 12 long-liners (6 from
Spain and 6 from Portugal). From the second year, at the request of the EU, the number of purse seine
vessels might be increased if scientific assessment warrants such an increase. The contribution by vessel
owners is set at
€35
per tonne. In the event that the overall quantity of catches by EU vessels in Kiribati waters
exceeds 6,400 tonnes per year as provided in the Article 2.1 of the Protocol, the amount of the financial
contribution increases by
€65
per tonne for the EU. However, the total annual amount paid by the EU is
capped at a maximum of
€956,800.
For shipowners yearly fishing authorisations are charged at
€35
per tonne
for 600 tonnes per purse seine vessel fishing authorisation, and for 120 tonnes for longline vessels, with an
additional
€35
per tonne paid if catches in any year exceed these amounts.
35
36
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2007:205:0003:0034:EN:PDF
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=COM:2002:0637:FIN:EN:PDF
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The technical conditions of the Protocol governing tuna fishing have been revised to take account of the
practices specific to highly-migratory species fisheries. These include the placing of observers on board EU
vessels and the obligation to employ fishermen from the ACP states (or a payment to the Kiribati authorities if
the EU vessels do not so). Pending the creation of a regional observers' scheme within the framework of the
WCPFC, Kiribati appoints the observers. Implementation of the Regional Observer Programme is based on
the use of existing regional, sub-regional and national observer programmes already in place when the
‘Conservation and Management Measure for the Regional Observer Programme CMM 2007-01 entered into
force on 15 February 2008. CMM 2007-01 provides for gradual development of the programme through to
2012. Up to 700 observers are deployed in the region, representing 100 % coverage for all purse seine
vessels
37
. The Protocol also includes a VMS protocol.
4.2
4.2.1
Utilisation
Fishing authorisations and uptake of the possibilities negotiated
4 purse seine fishing authorisations, with 1 for France, and 3 for Spain; and
12 longline fishing authorisations, evenly split between Portugal and Spain.
The Protocol provides for:
As can be seen in Table 22, apart from two longline fishing authorisations taken by Spain during the first year
of the Protocol (with no associated catches made), there has been 0 % utilisation of the longline fishing
authorisation possibilities. The longline fisheries of the EU fleets are more directly linked to the temperate
water fishery for swordfish rather than the tropical fisheries associated with tunas, which could account for the
lack of uptake of the longline fishing authorisations.
However, utilisation of the four purse seine fishing authorisations has been 100 % for each of year of the
Protocol. As can be seen from the table, Spain uses all four of the fishing authorisation possibilities under the
Protocol. The French fishing authorisation possibility is provided by France to Spain each year, without any
direct compensation being paid by Spain to France, as there is no French purse seine activity in the Pacific at
the present time.
Table 22: Utilisation of fishing authorisations provided for in the Protocol
Fishing category Fishing possibilities
2006/07
2007/8
2008/9
2009/10
2010/11
Country Authorisations Used %
Used %
Used %
Used %
Used %
Purse Seiners
ES
3
4 133%
4 133%
4 133%
4 133%
4 133%
FR
1
0
0%
0
0%
0 0%
0 0%
0 0%
Total
4
4 100%
4 100%
4 100%
4 100%
4 100%
Longliners
ES
6
2 33%
0
0%
0 0%
0 0%
0 0%
PT
6
0
0%
0
0%
0 0%
0 0%
0 0%
Total
12
2 17%
0
0%
0 0%
0 0%
0 0%
TOTAL
16
6 38%
4 25%
4 25%
4 25%
4 25%
Source: European Commission. ES = Spain. FR = France. PT = Portugal.
37
http://www.wcpfc.int/regional-observer-programme
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4.2.2
Catches and utilisation of the possibilities negotiated
For all years since 2007 there has been more than 100 % utilisation of the reference tonnage of 6,400 tonnes
per year, and an average of 178 % utilisation of the reference tonnage possibilities for the years between 2007
and 2011 (Table 23). It is important to note that the reference tonnage is not a quota per se, but rather a catch
quantity used to estimate the minimum financial contribution paid by the EU to Kiribati under the Protocol on
the basis of
€65
per tonne, and the basis on which vessel fishing authorisation fees are calculated (at
€35
per
tonne). In the event of catches over and above the reference tonnage, the protocol to the Protocol provides for
additional payments to be made to Kiribati by the EU of
€65
per tonne up to a maximum of
€956,800
i.e.
double the reference tonnage, and by vessels of
€35
per tonne. In 2011 provisional data show that catches
recorded by IEO exceeded twice the reference tonnage.
Table 23: Utilisation of catch possibilities provided for in the Protocol
Fishing
Category
Country
year
ES
Purse seiners
FR
Sub-total
ES
Longliners
TOTAL
Reference
tonnage
% utilisation
PT
Sub-total
/
2006 2007
2008
2009
2010
Average
2011Average 2007 to
2011
9,980
0
9,980
0
0
0
9,980
6,400
156%
11,416
0
11,416
0
0
0
11,416
6,400
178%
2,799 8,671 12,269 10,625 12,268 13,247
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2,799 8,671 12,269 10,625 12,268 13,247
0 2,799 8,671 12,269 10,625 12,268 13,247
0 6,400 6,400
0
44% 135%
6,400
192%
6,400
166%
6,400
192%
6,400
207%
Source: European Commission. Note data for 2011 provisional. ES = Spain. FR = France. PT = Portugal.
4.3
Costs of the Protocol
The total finances received by Kiribati under the Protocol for items specifically referred to in the Protocol text,
are shown in Table 24. They are based on a number of elements:
Financial contribution for access paid by the EU based on the reference tonnage;
Financial support for sectoral policy paid by the EU;
Financial contribution for access paid by the EU for catches over the reference tonnage;
Payments made by vessel owners based on the reference tonnage in the form of fishing authorisation
payments;
Payments made by vessel owners for catches over the reference tonnage; and
Payments made by vessel owners for vessel registration.
Table 24 shows that one payment which should have been paid (for sectoral policy) has not yet been paid
(pending the JC meeting). Further comment is provided on this issue in Section 4.4 below and in Appendix C.
Payments amounted to an average of more than
€1.2
mn.
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Further analysis of the payments made compared to the tonnages caught and the days spent fishing in Kiribati
waters, again for the period 2007-2011, is provided in Table 25. The data serve to highlight some important
points:
Payments equate on average to
€106/tonne,
and to
€5,016/day
spent by EU vessels in Kiribati waters
i.e. considerably more than the current PNA benchmark price of US$5,000/day. However when these
payments are converted into weighted days (with EU vessel days representing 1.5 vessel days – see
earlier discussion on PNA weighting to reflect greater catching capacity of larger vessels), the
payment per day on average over 2007 to 2011 was
€3,350
38
/ US$4,675 i.e. close to the current PNA
benchmark price of US$5,000/day. These data are however strongly affected by low catches in 2007
which increase the payments made per day, and analysis for the last three years (2009 to 2011)
presented earlier in Table 18 show considerably lower payments per EU-vessel day;
Payments made by the EU against the reference tonnage of 6,400 for the financial contribution for
access each year and the financial support for sectoral policy, total
€478,400,
which equates to
€74.5
/tonne (€65 /tonne for access plus
€62,400
per year for the sectoral support);
The payments for sectoral policy and access are based on the annual year of the Protocol i.e. starting
September, not the calendar year starting January. However, as the catches are reported in line with
the regional reporting by calendar year, the money for additional catches are paid based on calendar
years;
Payments per tonne of fish caught have remained constant during the period of the Protocol, while as
noted below, prices have risen by around 50 % over the same period. Payment per tonne as
previously highlighted is broadly consistent with payments made by other countries and their
respective catches;
Payment by the EU in 2012 could for the first time be limited by the Protocol which states that EU
payment for excess catches can only be twice the reference tonnage payments, if catches continue to
rise; and
The EU pays for 67 % of the total payments made to Kiribati, with fleet owners paying 33 %.
Calculated as the EU plus fleet owner payments for each year summed and averaged, and divided by the averaged sum of the
weighted days reported by SPC
38
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Table 24: Payments made to Kiribati by the EU and fleet owners
EU PAYMENTS
A. Financial compensation for access
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
Sub-total
B. Financial support for sectoral
policy
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
Sub-total
TOTAL A+B
C. Financial compensation for
exccess catches
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011 (provisional)
2012
Sub-total
TOTAL EU PAYMENTS A-C
FLEET OWNER PAYMENTS
D. Reference tonnage licences
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
Sub-total
E. Registration
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
Sub-total
F. Excess catch
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011 (provisional)
2012
Sub-total
TOTAL FLEET OWNER PAYMENTS D-F
TOTAL ALL PAYMENTS A-F
219,485
345,415
287,875
345,380
379,645
not yet known
1,577,800
2,105,800
6,161,345
219,485
345,415
287,875
345,380
n/a
n/a
1,577,800
2,105,800
5,108,865
n/a
n/a
0
0
1,052,480
0
0
0
0
3,600
2,400
2,400
2,400
2,400
2,400
15,600
3,600
2,400
2,400
2,400
2,400
2,400
15,600
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Amount due €/yr
334,880
287,040
191,360
191,360
191,360
191,360
1,387,360
Amount paid ( €)
334,880
287,040
191,360
191,360
191,360
0
1,196,000
Balance
0
0
0
0
0
191,360
191,360
143,520
191,360
287,040
287,040
287,040
287,040
1,483,040
2,870,400
143,520
191,360
287,040
0
0
0
621,920
1,817,920
0
0
0
287,040
287,040
287,040
861,120
1,052,480
147,615
381,485
274,625
381,420
445,055
not yet known
1,185,145
4,055,545
Amount due €/yr
92,400
84,000
84,000
84,000
84,000
84,000
512,400
147,615
381,485
274,625
381,420
n/a
n/a
1,185,145
3,003,065
Amount paid ( €)
92,400
84,000
84,000
84,000
84,000
84,000
512,400
0
0
0
0
0
1,052,480
Balance
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
n/a
n/a
Source: European Commission for EU payments, fleet owner payments based on tonnages and registration fees. Notes:
1/ Potential payments for excess catches in 2011 estimated based on provision catch data, but 2012 not included. 2/ In
2009 only 262,175 was actually paid by the EU for excess catches, with 12,450 offset by DG Budget following a recovery
by AIDCO of a Kiribati debt.
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Table 25: Payments made to Kiribati per tonne of fish and per day, 2007-2010
EU Payments (€)
Fleet payments (€)
Total payments(€)
Tonnes caught
EU payment/t (€)
Fleet payment/t (€)
Total payment/tonne (€)
Days in Kiribati
Tonnes per day
EU payment/day (€)
Fleet payment/day (€)
Total payment/day (€)
Total payment/day ($)
Adjusted days (1.5)
Total payment/ adjusted day (€)
Total payment/ adjusted day ($)
2007
626,015
315,485
943,507
8,671
72
36
109
90
96
6,956
3,505
10,461
0
135
6,989
9,435
2008
859,885
431,815
1,293,708
12,269
70
35
105
269
46
3,197
1,605
4,802
0
404
3,206
5,066
2009
753,025
374,275
1,129,309
10,625
71
35
106
460
23
1,637
814
2,451
0
690
1,637
2,308
2010
859,820
431,780
1,293,610
12,268
70
35
105
350
35
2,457
1,234
3,690
0
525
2,464
3,006
2011
923,455
466,045
1,391,511
13,247
70
35
105
378
35
2,443
1,233
3,677
0
567
2,455
3,559
Average
804,440
403,880
1,210,329
11,416
71
35
106
309
47
3,338
1,678
5,016
0
464
3,350
4,675
Source: Consultants’ calculations with European Commission the source for EU payments and tonnages caught. SPC
source for days spent in Kiribati. Note: Data for 2011 estimated based on provisional 2011 catch data provided by IEO,
and assumes days in Kiribati based on catch rates per day as per.
4.4
Compliance with the covenants and obligations specified in the FPA
A detailed examination of the covenants and obligations required by the FPA, and the status of compliance
with them, is provided in Appendix C.
The Appendix highlights that in many areas the covenants and obligations are being complied with by all
parties. All vessels are duly registered and licenced, have VMS onboard, report catches, and take onboard
observers. The Kiribati authorities have two designated accounts for the financial contribution for access and
the financial support for sectoral policy as required. And the EU for their part have increased the percentage of
the reference tonnage financial payments for sectoral support to 60 % as required. However areas of concern
include:
The failure of the Joint Committee (JC) meetings to take place until 2011 and the associated lack
therefore of any monitoring of the implementation of sectoral policy against the specified indicators
(although the sectoral development funds are reportedly being applied, and during the technical
meetings the EU did request the relevant documents to enable such monitoring to take place);
The slow payments in recent years for the financial support for the sectoral policy, in part also due to
the failure of the JC meetings to take place, as the JC meetings are required to assess existing
performance before authorizing additional payments;
The failure to supply inspection certificates and observer reports to shipowners; and
The lack of any real impetus towards joint enterprises or local landings for processing. EU vessel
owners try to engage actively with the local sector, for example through permanent employment of
shore-based labour, but there have been no real attempts for joint investments by EU and Kiribati
private sector interests and no moves to support onshore processing. These requirements as laid out
in the FPA are standard language that appear in all of the FPAs, and their failure to take place is
explained by the fact that they make little economic sense in Kiribati where the private sector is weak
in terms of both financial and human capacity, and where the economics of processing into cans are
make little sense (see earlier discussion in Section 3.8).
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4.5
4.5.1
Economic analysis of Protocol
Findings and discussion of the economic and financial impacts of the Protocol
4.5.1.1 Sales values
Price data are available for product shipped to Ecuador for processing as provided by OPAGAC. The cost of
carriage to Ecuador is estimated at
€150/tonne
from Christmas Island, and
€200
/tonne from Tarawa (due to
the greater distance). The following table shows Carriage Insurance and Freight (CIF) prices in Ecuador, and
the estimated average FOB ex-vessel prices for the three main species caught under the Protocol over the
evaluation period. The table also shows percentage changes in prices over time for the three species. The
table highlights how prices have risen considerably over the period of the existing protocol, and typically by
around 50 % in absolute terms.
Table 26: Carriage Insurance and Freight (CIF) prices paid for fish caught by EU purse seiners fishing
under the Protocol
CIF to Ecuador
€/metric ton
Species
Skipjack
Yellowfin
Bigeye
2006
645
1,197
806
2007
762
1,392
950
2008
966
1,400
1,105
2009
706
1,039
904
2010
777
1,332
1,065
2011
964
1,575
1,226
Average 2007-2011
CIF
835
1,348
1,050
Average carriage
costs
175
175
175
Average 2007-2011
FOB
660
1,173
875
Price change 2006-
2011
Source: OPAGAC for CIF prices (in absolute terms).
% increase on previous year
Skipjack
Yellowfin
Bigeye
18%
27%
-27%
10%
24%
16%
1%
-26%
28%
18%
18%
16%
-18%
18%
15%
49%
32%
52%
Prices paid to vessels fishing under the Protocol, can be compared to import prices for tuna in Bangkok, as
shown in Figure 12. Even accounting for different carriage/transportation costs, the generally lower prices paid
for fish caught under the Protocol and sent to Ecuador for processing are thought to reflect the smaller fish
caught by EU vessels due to their high dependency on FAD-caught fish, and the smaller fish that tend to
congregate around FADs. Price differentials for different sizes of fish exist because larger fish offer better
quality meat and better processing yields. Bangkok reference prices for tuna 1.8-3.4kg may be increased by
around 5 % for fish over 3.4kg, and reduced by 15 % for 1.4-18kg fish, and by as much as 35 % for fish less
than 1.4kg.
However, it should also be noted that drawing firm conclusions about price differentials is difficult, as price data
for catches made under the Protocol may also be affected by the vertically integrated nature of the fish
catching and processing sector operation, and the potential for transfer pricing to be taking place between
different links in the supply chain i.e. prices paid to vessels may be set higher or lower than would normally be
the case, so as to reduce or increase respectively processing sub-sector profits. It has not been possible to
explore in detail within this evaluation the extent to which this might be taking place, if at all.
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Figure 12: Average monthly import prices paid by Bangkok canneries for purse seine caught fish
(Euro/tonne, 2006 to July 2011)
Source:
http://www.customs.go.th/Customs-Eng/Statistic/StatisticIndex2550.jsp
Note: Prices are import prices to Thailand, and include carriage costs. Monthly $ prices converted to Euros using mid-
year exchange rate for each year 2006 to 2011. Bigeye tuna is not included in the price series/data due to the small
volumes compared to the other two species.
Table 27: Average yearly import prices paid by Bangkok canneries for purse seine caught fish
(Euro/tonne)
Year / species
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Av. 2007-2011
Source: as above.
Skipjack
723
966
1,059
811
1,031
1,106
994
Yellowfin
1,089
1,279
1,208
997
1,272
1,294
1,210
Species sales values used in the economic analysis are shown in Table 28 (FOB prices i.e. excluding carriage
costs to Ecuador).
Table 28: Average yearly ex-vessel prices (€/tonne)
Species Skipjack
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Average
470
587
791
531
602
789
628
Yellowfin Bigeye
1,022
1,217
1,225
864
1,157
1,400
1,148
631
775
930
729
890
1,051
834
Source: OPAGAC.
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Given the catch data available from IEO, as shown in Appendix D, catches made by the 84m vessels
averaged
€801/tonne
over the period of the Protocol, whereas catches made by the 100+m vessels averaged
€851/tonne.
The difference is explained by the different species mix of the catch made by the two vessel
classes each year, and the different yearly fish prices, which as shown in the table above differ each year in
relation to one another i.e. the price differential between yellowfin tuna and skipjack tuna, and bigeye tuna and
yellowfin tuna, is not the same each year. Over the period 2007 to 2011, 70 % of the catch of the 84m vessels
was comprised of skipjack, 17 % of yellowfin, and 13 % of bigeye. The respective figures for the 100+m
vessels were 68 % skipjack, 13 % yellowfin, and 19 % bigeye. The 100+m vessels displayed higher average
skipjack prices over the period 2007 to 2011 (€781/tonne) than for the 84m vessels (€669/tonne), and so given
the dominance of skipjack in terms of total production, even though average prices for yellowfin and bigeye
over 2007 to 2011 were both slightly lower than for the 84m vessels, the weighted basket price of fish is higher
for the 100+m vessels.
Total yearly value of catch made under the Protocol is shown in Figure 13, and demonstrates how the Protocol
is becoming increasingly important for EU purse seine vessels in the Pacific.
Figure 13: Annual value of catches made in Kiribati EEZ by EU vessels under the Protocol (Euros)
Source: IEO catch data (2011 provisional) provided by the European Commission, and prices provided by OPAGAC.
4.5.1.2 Value-added
The following table (Table 29) provides an estimation of the average annual value-added accruing from the
Protocol, based on the methodology described above. The table shows that a total of
€6.4
mn of value-added
is accrued each year when considering the benefits to both the European Union and Kiribati.
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Table 29: Average annual value added accruing to the EU and to Kiribati from the Protocol
Upstream sub-sector i.e. inputs % in EU
% in Kiri rate of VA
Port calls Kiribati
100%
75%
Insurance
100%
40%
Depreciation
100%
25%
Overhead/mgt charge
100%
100%
Fishing access rights
100%
Total upstream sub-sector
Cathing sub-sector
Crew
60%
4%
100%
Observers
100%
Vessel profit
100%
Total catching sub-sector
Downstream sub-sector
Fish processed in EU
45%
25%
Total processing sub-sector
TOTAL all sub-sectors
EU VA
114,168
890,269
285,096
1,289,533
639,412
1,821,584
2,460,996
1,060,847
1,060,847
4,811,375
Kiri VA
TOTAL
267,159
267,159
114,168
890,269
285,096
1,210,329
1,210,329
1,477,488
2,767,021
-
42,627
682,039
52,113
1,821,584
94,740
2,555,736
-
1,060,847
-
1,060,847
1,572,229
6,383,604
Notes: 1/ Upstream inputs only included if the value-added estimated is thought to accrue to either the EU or Kiribati
2/ Fuel not included in value-added estimations as taken at sea by tanker from international sources
3/ Repairs and mainteance assumed to take place in South America
4/ Port calls comprise the cost of labour for transshipment, supplies, management charges and taxes
5/ No repairs and mainteance take place in Kiribati, and vessels are assumed to split costs between Ecuador and the EU
6/ Vessels assumed to be insured and constructed in the EU
7/ Access fees considered and input and thus included in upstream sub-sector not in catching sub-sector
8/ Observer value-added based on standard $50/day fee paid by vessels for days in Kiribati zone x 1.25 to allow for travel time and
additional days vessels may have to pay observers to be onboard even when not fishing in Kiribati due to trip logistics
Source: Consultants’ calculations.
Upstream sub-sector
In the upstream sector, average annual value-added accrues to Kiribati to the tune of
€1.48
mn through port
calls, and through payments made by both the EU and vessel owners providing for EU vessels to fish in
Kiribati waters. The rate of value-added from port calls is high because of the large amounts of labour used
during transshipment (with a 100 % rate of value-added) comprised of around 80 people working to tranship
vessels over a 5-6 day period, and the transshipment taxes and other local taxes that are paid (also having a
value-added rate of 100 %).
Upstream value-added in the EU is comprised of value-added made on insurance, value-added on vessel
construction, and overhead/management charges. As Table 30 shows, value-added in the upstream sub-
sector is estimated at around
€1.3
mn.
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Catching sub-sector
Catching sub-sector value-added (€94,740) accruing to Kiribati is limited to the 2-3 Kiribati crew onboard EU
vessels, and the one observer on each vessel (given the 100 % observer coverage required). Fishing crew are
onboard year-round, but the model and above table assume that only their earnings while fishing in Kiribati
under the Protocol are eligible for inclusion in the estimation of value-added derived from the Protocol.
Observers are onboard when vessels are fishing in Kiribati, but typically spend additional time on EU vessels
as they have to be taken onboard at the beginning of any trip in which a vessel may move into the Kiribati
EEZ, even when vessels may spend a part of that trip outside of the Kiribati EEZ.
For the European Union, the catching sub-sector generates considerable levels of value-added, primarily
through vessel profits (more than
€1.8
mn per year, and with vessel EBIT of 11 % for 84m vessels and 23 %
for 100+m vessels), but also through EU labour employed on the vessels fishing in Kiribati under the Protocol.
Downstream processing sub-sector
There is no downstream processing sector value-added derived in Kiribati from the Protocol, as there is no
processing of tuna caught under the Protocol. The model, and this evaluation, does not include any estimation
of the very small amounts of value-added that might be made from sales in Kiribati of bycatch landed by EU
vessels into Kiribati.
For the EU value-added is estimated at just over
€1
mn per year. Of the total average yearly catch made
under the Protocol (11,416 tonnes), it is estimated by OPAGAC
39
that 10 % is destined for processing in
Bangkok, and the remaining 90 % for Ecuador. Of the 10,274 tonnes estimated to be processed in Ecuador
each year, 50 % is processed into cans, and the other 50 % into loins which are then sent to the
EU/Spain/Galicia for processing into cans. Thus 5,137 tonnes whole weight and 2,677 tonnes of loined weight
(based on conversion factor of 0.485
40
) are estimated to be processed in the EU, with associated levels of
value-added in terms of labour and profits. It should be noted that labour value-added associated with the
processing in the EU is relatively small because the major labour inputs in processing take place at the loining
stage. Thus the Protocol is contributing to value-added in South America as well as in the EU. The fact that
canning continues to be viable in Spain compared to elsewhere, may in part be explained by the lower weight
of tuna cans in Spain compared to elsewhere in the world (a typical tuna can in Spain weighs 80g net and has
a 52g drained weight). This means that relative to the tuna weight the price of steel and packaging and the
vegetable oil are more important. When also considering marketing and distribution factors, and fact that Spain
has a highly technically advanced and automated process to transfer loins into cans, this explains why in
recent years it has still been economically viable to can in Spain.
Balance of value-added between sub-sectors and between the EU and Kiribati
Table 29 above allows for the calculation of the balance of value-added between sub-sectors, and between
the EU and Kiribati. As shown in Table 30, EU value-added is concentrated strongly in the catching sector
(51 % of total EU value-added), while for Kiribati almost all the value-added (94 %) is derived from the
upstream/input sub-sector in the form of payments made by the EU and fleet owners.
When considering the total value-added to the EU and to Kiribati, the analysis shows that 75 % of all value-
added accrued to the EU, and 25 % to Kiribati.
39
40
Pers. Comm., February 2012
See http://www.iattc.org/PDFFiles2/TT-23-04-Tracking-and-certification.pdf
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Table 30: Balance of value-added between sub-sectors, and between the EU and Kiribati
Value-added
Upstream/input sub-sector
Catching sub-sector
Processing sub-sector
Total
Source: Consultants’ calculations.
EU
% of EU % of EU & KI Kiribati
% of Kiribati % of EU & KI
1,289,533
26.8%
46.6% 1,477,488
94.0%
53.4%
2,460,996
51.1%
96.3%
94,740
6.0%
3.7%
1,060,847
22.0%
100.0%
-
0.0%
0.0%
4,811,375 100.0%
75.4% 1,572,229
100.0%
24.6%
4.5.1.3 Costs and benefits
Table 31 below shows the costs and benefits of the Protocol to the European Union, to the fleet owners, and
to Kiribati.
For the EU as a whole, the Protocol generated an average annual benefit/cost (B/C) ratio of 4.0,
demonstrating that the Protocol provides good value for money with every
€1
invested by the EU and fleet
owners generating
€4.0
of benefit in terms of value-added.
For the fleet owners, benefits from the Protocol are significant given that a large proportion of the total EU
value-added benefits accrue in the catching sub-sector, while the vessel owners pay 33 % of the total
payments made to Kiribati with the remaining payments made by the EU. The cost of access for vessel owners
(€35/tonne) represents 4.1-4.4 % of the average weighted sales prices received for catches made under the
Protocol. Annual average catch values made under the Protocol are close to
€9.5
mn, and given operating and
fixed costs, profits as a proportion of sales revenues range between 11 % and 23 % for the two vessel
classes.
Kiribati received more than
€1.2
mn per year on average from the European Union, plus smaller benefits in the
form of value-added made from port calls made by EU vessels and from local crew and observers onboard EU
vessels. When considering the payments made over the course of the Protocol per PNA-weighted vessel day,
the analysis shows that there was not a significant difference in the payments received from the EU as
opposed to from other countries, although as noted earlier these differences are more marked when only
considering catches and payments over the last three years.
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Table 31: Average annual costs and benefits (€) of the Protocol (2007 to 2011)
To European Community
Costs
Total value -added benefits
Total payments to Kiribati
1,210,329
Payments to Kiribati per tonne of fish
106
Payments to Kiribati per PNA weighted day
3,350
To Fleet owners
Payments to Kiribati
403,880
Payments to Kiribati per tonne of fish
35
Profit before interest and tax
Catch value
Operating costs per day
11,963 - 16,783
Profit as % of catch value
To Kiribati
Payments received per PNA-weighted day under FPA
Payments received per PNA weighted day from others
3,597
Value-added from port calls
Value-added from vessel crew
Payments made for access and sectoral support
Benefits
4,811,375
B/C ratio
4.0
1,821,584
9,503,211
11-23%
3,340
267,159
42,627
1,210,329
0.9
Notes: Kiribati Benefit/Cost (B/C) ratio estimated based on difference between average yearly
payments made under FPA over 2007-2011, and average yearly payments made by other countries
for access 2009-2011
Source: Consultants’ calculations.
Given the flow of product from Kiribati through Ecuador for processing and on to the EU, and the fact that EU
vessels operating in Kiribati are based out of Ecuador, the Protocol also generates considerable benefits to the
Ecuadorian economy in the form of vessel supplies, and value-added (profits and employment) in the
processing sector (both for canning and for loining). While to some extent these benefits may ultimately also
accrue to the European Union through EU beneficial ownership of Ecuadorian operations, due to time
limitations and budgetary constraints, this evaluation does not attempt to quantify the extent to which such
benefits occurring from the Protocol in Ecuador could be considered as benefits to the European Union.
4.5.1.4 Supplies to the market
As noted above, an estimated yearly average of 10 % of catch made under the Protocol is destined for
processing in Bangkok, and the remaining 90 % for processing in Ecuador. Of the catch processed in Ecuador
each year, an estimated 50 % is processed into cans, and the other 50 % into loins which are then sent to the
EU (Spain/Galicia) for processing into cans.
Canned tuna imports to the EU reached a high of 426,592 tonnes in 2007, but declined to 371,013 in 2010.
The table below (Table 32) shows that catches made under the Protocol and canned in Ecuador contribute a
small proportion of the total EU market for canned tuna (an average of 1.2 % per year). Kiribati FPA catches in
2010 represented 9 % of total canned exports from Ecuador to the EU (which itself represented 16 % of total
EU imports of canned tuna), and a relatively high percentage (19 %) of total Spanish imports of canned tuna
(28,362 tonnes) assuming that all cans from Ecuador using Kiribati FPA caught fish are destined for Spain.
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With respect to the import of loins to the EU, the FPA catch in Kiribati accounts for around 3 % of loined
imports to the EU market once a conversion ratio of 0.485
41
is applied to the whole weight, 4 % of the imports
of loins to Spain (which itself accounts for 64 % of total EU imports of loins), and 6.9 % of Ecuadorian exports
of loins to the EU.
Spanish canned tuna production was reported as 226,418 tonnes in 2010, with loins from catch made in
Kiribati under the Protocol contributing an estimated 1.2 % of Spanish tuna canning raw material imports.
Table 32: EU imports of canned and loined tuna and estimated contributions of catch made under the
Protocol to EU imports
Import of canned
tuna to EU
2007
2008
2009
2010
Average
426,592
424,865
378,432
371,013
400,226
Import of frozen
pre-cooked loins
81,527
85,052
112,121
104,686
Imports from
Kiribati
Protocol
3,902
5,521
4,781
5,521
4,931
Imports from
Kiribati
Protocol
1,892.45
2,677.71
2,318.91
2,677.49
% of imports
0.9%
1.3%
1.3%
1.5%
1.2%
% of imports
2%
3%
2%
3%
2007
2008
2009
2010
Average
95,847
2,391.64
2%
Notes: Assumes constant 90 % of catch from
Protocol
destined for the EU,
and 50 % as cans and 50 % as loins
EU canned imports include tuna in pouches as same tariff code
Loin to whole conversion ratio estimated at .485
Source: EU trade statistics and IEO catch data provided by the European
Commission.
41
See http://www.iattc.org/PDFFiles2/TT-23-04-Tracking-and-certification.pdf
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4.6
Employment analysis of the Protocol
The employment estimated to be generated by the Protocol is shown in Table 33, and is estimated at 98 Full-
Time Equivalent (FTE) jobs. This employment generation represents 116 tonnes of fish caught under the
Protocol for every one job, or 0.009 jobs per tonne of fish caught under the Protocol. While total EU FTE jobs
are estimated at 51,158 EU jobs are in some way dependent on the Protocol (i.e. total jobs not accounting for
dependency on Kiribati catch). Total FTE in Kiribati is estimated at 47, and Kiribati thus accounts for 48 % of
the FTE resulting from catches made under the Protocol.
Catching sector FTE is estimated from the data on crewing nationalities
42
, the number of vessels operating
under the Protocol (four), and the dependency of vessels on catches in Kiribati. It is noteworthy that 2-3
Kiribati crew are permanently onboard EU vessels, and the total number employed by the fleet is more than
the six included as an objective in the Annex to the FPA. In addition the EU vessels take onboard Kiribati
observers. It is also noteworthy that of the total crew around 50 % are from the EU, with the balance of around
40 % being sourced from South America.
Upstream jobs in the EU are based on a figure provided in the Oceanic Developpement
et al.
2008
methodological guidelines for jobs per vessel, and dependency of vessels on catches in Kiribati, and may well
be over-estimated given the supplies and services to EU vessels operating in Kiribati waters coming from
South America; the Protocol certainly generates upstream jobs in South America as well as in the EU. On the
other hand it is likely that some of the jobs created in South America may be for EU nationals, but it is not
possible within the scope of this evaluation to provide more quantitative estimates of the extent to which this
might be the case.
Upstream jobs in Kiribati are based on three managers of logistical support employed in Kiritimati (Christmas
Island) and two in Tarawa, and around 100 people employed when vessels land/tranship in Kiribati (converted
in FTEs) for transshipment and other requirements, with each vessel landing taking an estimated 5 days (40 of
these 100 are now under permanent contract to OPAGAC but also work unloading other vessels). Temporary
manual labourers are reported to earn around
€2/hour.
There is no downstream employment of any note in Kiribati resulting from the Protocol, but the loins processed
in Ecuador and destined for the El Grove cannery in Galicia/Spain generate an estimated 9-10 jobs in the EU.
The extent to EU-based processing sector employment is limited by the loining process taking place in
Ecuador. A large proportion of the labour in canning is associated with cutting and cleaning tuna into loins, and
this helps to explain why much of the catch is loined in Ecuador where labour costs are cheaper than in the
EU.
42
OPAGAC, Pers. Comm., February 2012
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Table 33: Employment generated by the Protocol
Catching sub-sector
Fleet
Vessel crew
EU crew
Kiribati crew
Kiribati observers
Other crew
Total
Dependency on Kiribati
FPA related employment/vessel
EU FPA related crew
Kiribati FPA related crew
Kiribati FPA related observers
Other FPA related crew
Total FPA related jobs
Upstream sub-sector
EU Jobs per fleet segment
FPA related EU jobs
Kiribati jobs
Other country FPA related jobs
Downstream sub-sector
Employment at El Grove/Galicia
Yearly production capacity (t)
Input of loins from FPA (t)
FPA EU related jobs
Total EU FPA-related jobs
Total Kiribati FPA-related jobs
TOTAL FPA-related jobs
Jobs per tonne of fish
Payments to Kiribati per EU job
Tonnes of fish per job
73m
2
15
2
1
10
28
25%
3.7
0.5
0.2
2.5
6.9
44
10.9
not estimated
300
75,000
2,392
9.6
50.8
47.3
98.1
0.009
23,810
116
100m
2
15
3
1
12
31
31%
4.6
0.9
0.2
3.7
9.6
44
13.6
60
10
4
44
118
51%
8%
3%
37%
100%
Total for fleet %
16.7
2.8
1.0
12.4
33.1
88
24.5
43.5
51%
9%
3%
37%
100%
52%
48%
100%
Notes: 1/ Upstream jobs based on estimate of 22 jobs per vessel for EC purse seiners in the
Indian Ocean, quoted in Oceanic Developpment et al 2008 report on methodological guidelines
2/ All jobs estimated on Full-Time Equivalent basis
Source: Consultants’ calculations.
Also emphasized in Appendix C, and earlier in Section 4.4, the social clause elements of the Protocol in terms
of wage levels, seamen having contracts, etc., are all being fully complied with.
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4.7
Effectiveness – The extent to which the specific FPA objectives were achieved
To what extent has the Protocol contributed to the development of responsible fishing?
The EU fleet plays only a small role in terms of overall fleet activity in both Kiribati and WCP. Its ability to
impact on responsible fishing is therefore limited given the large number of purse seine vessels operating in
the region from other flag States.
However, EU vessels have exceeded their reference vessel days allocated under the WCPFC Convention for
time allowed in High Seas; while not directly relevant to this evaluation as outside the Kiribati EEZ, there is an
indirect link in that a) the Protocol provides the basis by which vessels can operate sustainably in the region
more generally, and therefore in high seas areas, and b) stocks exploited in the high seas areas are the same
as those exploited in Kiribati waters. In addition, and more directly related to the evaluation of the Protocol, the
strong reliance on FADs by the EU fleets (see Table 5) is a potential issue of concern given the higher catches
of juveniles (and some resulting discarding so as to high-grade as reported by observers during consultations
in Kiribati
43
contrary to Kiribati and CMM requirements) and the higher proportions of bigeye and yellowfin tuna
in catches made on FADs (see Table 4 and Table 12). Earlier text in this report (see Section 3.4) highlighted
concerns over bigeye stock status in particular. The strong reliance on FADs also results in high interactions
with pelagic sharks, some of which are estimated to be in danger of overexploitation.
It is for that reason that the EU is supportive of FAD management plans to be adopted by WCPFC (as stated
in a submission by the EU to the WCPFC in February 2012 on a CMM for the conservation and management
of tropical tunas (bigeye, yellowfin and skipjack) in the WCPFC Convention Area). The EU also actively
participates more generally in the WCPFC and its deliberations with regards to responsible fishing. Other ways
in which the Protocol is contributing to the development of responsible fishing include: provision in the Protocol
for a modification of the fishing opportunities should conservation and protection measures so require; support
for sectoral policy; and the Protocol being a means by which EU vessels fishing in the Kiribati EEZ can be
subjected to the management measures recommended by the WCPFC, the regional fisheries organisation
covering the region to which the European Union is a full Commission Cooperating Member.
Sectoral policy support provided under the Protocol should also be contributing to responsible fishing, both by
the Kiribati fisheries sector, and more generally by other nations fishing in Kiribati waters, through actions
aimed at reducing IUU, strengthening MCS and improving management capacities to strengthen compliance.
The extent to which this is in fact the case is difficult for the consultants to judge – as noted in Appendix C, part
of the reason for the lack of sectoral support payments in recent years has been the failure by the Kiribati
authorities to provide the EU with the documentation necessary to show that the sectoral policy matrix is being
implemented, and so such documentation is not available for review by the consultants. During the
consultants’ consultations in Kiribati, the government stated
44
that sectoral development funds are being
applied with the monies being committed to the various activities listed according to the matrix provided.
However the consultants were not provided with a breakdown of expenditure commitments to verify that this
was actually the case. It is also noteworthy that priority within MFMRD, focusses very much on deploying
development funds, specific to the EU and the USMLT agreement, the fisheries administration budget has
been cut. This is a worrying development against the background of the need to improve fisheries
management systems per se.
43
44
Pers. Comm., February 2012
Director of Fisheries, Pers. Com, February 2012
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Other areas of concern over the contribution and impact of the Protocol on responsible fishing include: some
weaknesses in MCS capacities in Kiribati (as noted in Section 3.9); and a failure of the parties to adequately
monitor the implementation of sectoral policy elements (noting that this does not necessarily imply that the
sector policy elements are not being implemented).
To what extent has the Protocol contributed to the processing industry and the market in both the EU
and the partner country?
The Protocol has not contributed to any forms of processing in Kiribati, as the only landings of catch in Kiribati
are very small quantities of bycatch which are destined for the local market. The Protocol has not resulted in
any joint processing enterprises being established in Kiribati. The reasons for this are explained by the
potential economics of establishing processing/canning for export, as highlighted in Section 3.8.
As highlighted in the analysis in Section 4.5, the Protocol contributes to the EU processing sector, with around
45 % of catch made under the Protocol loined in Ecuador before being exported for canning in the EU. These
loins represent around 2 % of the EU demand for imported loins. Canning of product in the EU generates both
employment and value-added within the EU. The Protocol also benefits Ecuadorian processing operations
which loin the tuna, and which also can around 45 % of catch made under the Protocol. The export of this
canned product to the EU represented an average of 1.2 % of the total EU imports of canned tuna over 2007
to 2011.
A very high percentage (around 90 %) of all fish caught under the Protocol is destined for the EU market.
To what extent has the EU fleet exploited the surplus available in Kiribati?
In part this evaluation question relates to the extent to which the Protocol has contributed to responsible
fishing, and comments made above therefore pertain. Earlier text in Section 3.4 demonstrated that while EU
fleets have been exploiting ‘surplus’ skipjack stocks, for yellowfin tuna the stock is at least fully exploited and
there is a 50 % chance that overfishing is occurring. However it is with respect to bigeye tuna that there is the
greatest possibility that EU fleets are making catches from a stock for which no surpluses are available.
Recent assessments show that overfishing of bigeye tuna is currently occurring, with catches around 7 %
higher than the MSY, and with current levels of catch unlikely to be sustainable.
It is however also of interest that Kiribati has a number of PAE days allocated to it which up to now, it is not
able to utilise. Some of this may be in response to climatic variations, which in the case of 2011 resulted in
much of the fishing taking place in the west of the WCPO. Some historic under-utilisation also suggests that
there may be some further opportunities for EU fleet activity. However, within the framework of the VDS, it is
important to ensure that the TAE is set against specific Limit and Target reference points in order to ensure
sustainable exploitation.
What has been the contribution of the Protocol to the activities of the EU catching sector?
The Protocol has been very significant for the four purse seine vessels utilising the Protocol. Catch rates and
revenues show an increasing trend over the period of the Protocol, and vessels show a high dependency on
catches made in the Kiribati EEZ. As a fleet based in the central Pacific and operating in both the WCP and
the EPO, access to the waters of Kiribati is critical for overall vessel viability. The important contribution the
Protocol plays to purse seine operations is evidenced from the high rates of utilisation as shown earlier in this
report, and in 2011 provisional data suggest that catches exceed 200 % of the reference tonnage for the first
time.
The Protocol has made no contribution to the activities of the EU longline sector. Two fishing authorisations
were taken in 2007 but no catches were made, and in subsequent years no fishing authorisations have been
taken and no catches made in the Kiribati EEZ.
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To what extent has the Protocol been successful in creating employment both for EU nationals, and
those in the partner country?
The Protocol is estimated to create roughly equal number of jobs in both the EU and Kiribati, and a total of 98
FTE jobs (see Section 4.6).
While 51 FTE jobs result from the Protocol in the EU based on catch dependencies, it is estimated that around
157 jobs are in some way dependent on the Protocol. The creation of EU jobs is lower in the processing sub-
sector than in both the upstream and catching sub-sectors, and particularly for the estimate 60 EU nationals
working onboard the EU fleet, the Protocol is important in creating and maintaining their employment.
In Kiribati employment creation is very strongly focussed in the upstream vessel support sector (e.g.
transshipment services, vessel support, etc.), and the failure of the Protocol to generate any joint enterprises
in either the catching or processing sub-sector has meant that few jobs are created in either of these sub-
sectors. The reasons for this failure have been explained earlier in this report and relate to a weak local private
sector, and the economics of local processing for export which would probably not create the conditions for
viable export processing of canned product.
The Protocol also creates employment in South America, and in Ecuador in particular, in the upstream,
catching and processing sub-sectors.
4.8
Efficiency – The extent to which the desired effects were achieved at a reasonable cost
To what extent is the cost of the fishing possibilities negotiated under the Protocol advantageous for
the EU fishing industry?
Indications that the Protocol has been efficient for the fishing industry include the fact that access payments
per tonne of fish have remained constant over the period of the Protocol, while ex-vessel fish prices rose by 49
%, 32 % and 52 % for skipjack, yellowfin and bigeye tuna respectively over 2006-2011 (see Table 28). At the
same time as these price rises, vessel operational costs may not have risen significantly over the evaluation
period – the single most important operational cost item for purse seine vessels is fuel, which accounts for an
estimated 46-50 % of operational costs. Analysis of gasoil prices over 2007 to 2011 shows that the average
yearly price did not rise over this period, in large part due to significant reductions in prices in 2009 and 2010
before prices rose again in 2011 to above 2007 levels. The access fees paid by vessels represent 4.1-4.4 % of
the value of catches (see Appendix D). All of these factors help to explain the profits for vessels using the
Protocol (earnings before interest and tax of 11-23 % of sales revenues – see Appendix D), and suggest that
the cost of fishing possibilities negotiated under the Protocol are advantageous for the EU fishing industry.
However, the strong concentration of total EU value-added made in the catching sub-sector (see Table 29,
and the relatively small value-added in the upstream and downstream sub-sectors in the EU (in part due to the
reliance on South American vessel bases and processing) suggests that the Protocol is providing better value-
for money for fleet owners than for EU tax payers.
The Protocol has resulted in the creation of jobs for the EU, and a measure of efficiency can be inferred from
the fact that total combined payment from the EU (EU and fleet owners) per EU-job created over the
evaluation period was
€23,810
(see Table 33).
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To what extent is the cost of the fishing possibilities negotiated under the Protocol advantageous for
Kiribati?
Payments made to Kiribati over 2007 to 2011 were more than
€6
mn, at an annual average of
€1.2
mn (see
Section 4.3). For the years 2009 to 2011, payments made by the EU under the Protocol represented 7 %, 4 %
and 7 % of national fishing licence revenue. As described in Section 2, revenues from fishing licences
traditionally provide between 23-30 % of Kiribati’s government revenue, suggesting that Protocol payments
account for around 1-2 % of total annual government revenues.
In addition to the revenue to Government from the Protocol, value-added of around
€300,000
per year is
created through onshore services provided to vessels during port calls, and through fishing crew and
observers employed on EU vessels (see Table 29). The Protocol has however not been advantageous or
efficient in generating any downstream activity in Kiribati, and there has been a failure through the Protocol to
develop any on-shore processing capacity, for the reasons already elaborated in terms of the economic
viability of doing so. The Protocol has however been successful in generating interest by EU vessels in
supporting local employment creation, and this is reflected through MoUs between OPAGAC and the
government, updated yearly, covering observers, stevedores, cooperation in field of a donated cargo vessel
for inter-island transport, and a salt project in Kiritimati (Christmas Island).
The presence of the EU fleet provides an alternative to traditional fleets operating in the WCP, thereby
strengthening the hand of Kiribati negotiators of access rights, through having a larger number of nations
interested in negotiating access.
What is the cost-benefit ratio of the Protocol?
The Protocol has cost the EU an average of
€804,440
per year over the period 2007 to 2011, and fleet owners
€403,880
per year, with total payments from the EU thus averaging
€1.2
mn per year. These costs have
directly resulted in average yearly value-addition for the EU of
€4.8
mn, with a benefit/cost ratio for the EU
therefore of 4.0 i.e. for every Euro spent,
€4.0
of value-added has been created. The Protocol has thus been
efficient for the EU as described in Section 4.5.
Over the evaluation period of 2007 to 2011, the payments paid by the EU per PNA-adjusted fishing day, and
per tonne of fish caught, were only slightly less than payments made by other countries for access to Kiribati
waters (a benefit cost ratio of 0.9), although during the last three years payments received from the EU per
PNA-adjusted fishing day have been less than the average payments received from other countries (see Table
18).
4.9
Sustainability – The extent to which positive / negative effects are likely to last after the FPA has
terminated
How far has the Protocol ensured the viability of the EU fishing sector?
The Protocol has generated considerable levels of value-added (€2.5 mn) and profits for the EU catching sub-
sector (€1.8 mn, equal to 11-23 % profit on sales before interest and tax) which has supported the investment
capacity of the sector, thereby contributing to its sustainability (see Table 30.)
Financial and economic sustainability of the catching sub-sector in turn means that the Protocol has
contributed to sustainable employment for the estimated 60 EU-crew working in the catching sub-sector. The
strong dependency on Kiribati in terms of total catches (25 % and 31 % of total catches for the 84m and
100+m vessels respectively – see Appendix D), and the fact that the EU fleet is a central Pacific fleet, means
that the Protocol has been very important in ensuring the sustainability of the four vessels fishing under the
Protocol.
In contrast to the contribution to the viability of the purse-seine fleet, no longline vessels have been supported
under this Protocol so there has been no contribution to longline fleet viability. Longline vessels from the EU
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operate in the swordfish fishery that lies outside the EEZs of Pacific island nations and is, in any case, distinct
from the tropical tuna longline fisheries.
In terms of the upstream sector in the EU, the Protocol has had no contribution to the sustainability of
suppliers of operational inputs to the catching sub-sector in the EU, but may have made small contributions to
the sustainability of vessel construction operations given the comments made above about the Protocol having
supported investment capacity in the catching sub-sector.
Downstream of the catching sub-sector there has also been a small contribution to the sustainability of
processing operations in the EU which process loins of tuna in cans, but this contribution is reduced by the
levels of processing that take place in South America.
How far has the Protocol ensured the viability of the partner country fishing sector?
The fisheries catching sub-sector in Kiribati is predominantly small-scale with a large percentage of the
population engaged in fishing activities in some form or other and the operations of the domestic fleet are such
that there is no direct competition for resources or interaction between the fleets. The EU purse seine fleet is
only a minor operator in the WCP, representing only 2 % of the total purse seine fishery. The limited catches
by EU vessels as a % of total WCPO catches, and the current under-utilisation of Kiribati PAE vessel days,
mean that the fishing under the Protocol does not appear to threaten the sustainability of the Kiribati fishing
sector. The Protocol has also contributed to the capacity development of local fishing crew employed onboard
EU vessels.
The activities and visits of foreign vessels, including those from the EU, contribute to the sustainability of the
domestic upstream sector by providing revenues and employment opportunities i.e. for transshipment
services, agents, etc.
The Protocol has not however been successful in resulting in any sustainable joint catching sub-sector
operations, or in making any contributions to sustainable Kiribati processing sector operations (while there has
been an initiative to develop a tuna loining plant, this has been an initiative related to the Chinese longline fleet
and it is unlikely to cater for purse seine caught tuna).
The Protocol has also made important contributions to government revenues that are used to support the local
fisheries sector. It is notable that the Protocol, along with US, is the only access Agreement where funds are
allocated to fisheries sector development rather than directly to Treasury. Through these payments, the
Protocol has contributed to the development of Kiribati fisheries sector by facilitating such activities as
contributing to coastal fishery development projects, capacity-building in the sector, participation of Kiribati
delegates in international meetings, and membership of international organisations. It could be argued that
these activities would probably have taken place even in the absence of the Protocol but, at the same time,
their financing would have reduced funding available for other initiatives. The administration and
implementation of the Protocol also makes some contribution to government staff capacities and the revenue
generated under the Protocol can support additional capacity development. Other comments have been made
earlier about the difficulties for the consultants in determining the extent to which the sectoral policy payments
are directly contributing to a sustainable and viable local sector.
Sales of bycatch from EU purse seine vessels may have had some negative impacts on the sustainability of
local traders of fish, through the effect of sales of bycatch from purse seine vessels on reducing domestic
market prices, although this issue has not been well researched during this evaluation. To the extent to which
this may have happened, there may also have been corresponding benefits to local consumers in terms of
reduced prices of fish. Both the government and the purse seine vessel owners are engaged in exploring
options for storing fish and releasing this to the market at times of low domestic supply so as to minimize any
negative impacts of the sale of purse seine bycatch in Kiribati.
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4.10 Consistency – The extent to which positive / negative spill-over onto other economic, social or
environmental policy areas are being maximised / minimised
How consistent is the Protocol with the CFP in general?
International fisheries instruments, including both the CFP and WCFPC management measures contain a
number of requirements to manage capacity and fishing effort, to control catches, and to minimise bycatch.
The CFP recognises the important role that RFMOs must play in managing regional stocks, and the need for
the EU to participate in them
45
, and so for the Protocol to be coherent with the CFP, it must also be
coherent/consistent with WCPFC management measures.
The EU is a CCM to the WCPFC, and the Protocol is coherent with both the CFP and WCPFC policies and
management measures. For example the Protocol is coherent with Commission Regulation (EC) No 500/2001
of 2001 laying down the rules for the application of Council Regulation (EEC) No 2847/93 on the monitoring of
catches taken by EU fishing vessels in third country waters and on the high seas. The Protocol also contains a
VMS protocol which is being followed, and all vessels must be duly licenced and registered as per the
requirements of the CFP and WCPFC. In other aspects, there is coherence by the Protocol and vessel
activities with other CMM measures including 100 % on-board observer coverage and the 3 month FAD
closure, and because of the strong emphasis in the CFP on responsible fisheries and working within RFMOs,
the Protocol is thus also coherent with the CFP in this regard.
Comment has been made under the section on effectiveness (Section 4.7) about the extent to which the
Protocol is contributing to responsible fishing – a key principle of the CFP. The EU regulations and the
Protocol are coherent in terms of prohibiting fishing on marine mammals and on shark finning. There are
however some potentially worrying issues, most specifically the high discard rates of pelagic sharks, which as
yet have not been fully addressed within the Protocol or WCPFC, with a corresponding lack of coherence with
the CPF’s efforts to support sustainable fishing operations. In this regard, there is evidence that pelagic shark
species are heavily depleted, and the actions in force through CMM 2008-03, are inadequate.
The FPA also refers to, and is consistent with both the FAO’s Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries, and
with the International Labour Organisation’s Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work.
In what ways is the Protocol consistent with the other EU policies (i.e. development and cooperation
policy, trade policy, environmental policy, etc.)?
Whilst the Kiribati Protocol specifies a sectoral support component, this is provided separately from other
development assistance provided by the EU. The current 10th EDF (2008-2013) contains provisions for
support for water sanitation and renewable energy and non-focal technical cooperation. Fisheries have
remained outside of both the 9th or 10th EDF national programmes for Kiribati, and Kiribati is ineligible for
direct support through the ACP FISH2 programme as support is intended to be provided through the Protocol
(see discussion in Section 2.3). Given that the Protocol is so important to EU vessels, and that there are
pressing needs for capacity development and other support, for example in the field of strengthening MFMRD
capacity, this demonstrates a lack of coherence between direct development policy and the Protocol.
At the regional level there is better coherence in that regional 10
th
EDF focus includes fisheries issues such as
training and capacity development for access negotiations, training of observers, etc. Support for SPC under
regional programmes is entirely coherent with the Protocol and ensuring responsible fisheries.
Communication from the Commission to the Council and the European Parliament Community - participation in Regional Fisheries
Organisations (RFOs):
COM/99/0613
45
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To date, EU trade and FPA negotiations have been addressed separately, which might raise the prospect of
potential inconsistencies. However, there is currently no domestic processing of fish for export to the EU, and
the Protocol has no real bearing on Kiribati fish trade to the EU. There are therefore no inconsistencies in the
Protocol text or its implementation, and EU trade policy.
The current FPA and Protocol are coherent with EU environmental policy given the strong emphasis on
sustainable fishing (in the objectives of the Agreement and in Article 7 of the Protocol). The Annex also
contains many provisions to ensure responsible behaviour by fishing vessels in terms of environmental policy
e.g. respecting closed areas, the requirement for observers, and monitoring of vessel activity.
In what ways is the Protocol consistent with the fisheries and developing policy of the partner
country?
At the national level there is consistency between the Protocol and Government development objectives as
described in Sections 2 and 3. Access compensation under the Protocol can be used by the Treasury to
support national development objectives as it sees fit. In addition, vessel activities and operations at Kiritimati
(Christmas Island) make direct contributions to the government objective of development of the island and
employment creation so as to reduce population pressure on Tarawa. Furthermore the JC meeting in April
2011 incorporated the development of the jetty at Kiritimati (Christmas Island) into the sectoral policy matrix.
With regards to coherence between the Protocol and national fisheries policy, financial support for sectoral
policy development and implementation is based on the national development plan and the MFMRD plan and
objectives, and this ensures a strong level of consistency between the sectoral policy matrix and national
fisheries policy. However, in the implementation of the Protocol payments for sectoral policy implementation
have been delayed with the result that the programme has been operational only from the second half of 2011
and the next JC meeting will consider the implementation of the sectoral policy matrix. At this stage it is
therefore too early to assess how effectively the programme is being implemented or its impacts. The Protocol
is consistent with and also stresses compliance with the national fisheries Act.
Perhaps the key issue of concern in relation to consistency however, is the fact that the Protocol is a tonnage-
based Protocol, with payments for access made per tonne. National policy, in line with evolving regional
initiatives, is now strongly in favour of negotiating and providing access based on vessel days (although this
fact has not been directly communicated to the EU).
4.11 Relevance – The extent to which the FPA’s objectives were pertinent to the needs, problems and
issues faced by stakeholders
Does the Protocol satisfy various needs of the different interest groups in the EU?
The Protocol most strongly meets the interests and needs of the Spanish purse seine fleet, and is highly
relevant to this fleet. The Protocol has both a direct and strategic benefit for this fleet. The Protocol adequately
provides for the needs of the Spanish fleet in terms of catch possibilities, as evidenced by the fact that there is
no maximum quantity of catch specified in the Protocol. However, stakeholder consultations suggest that the
Protocol would be even more strongly aligned with the needs of the Spanish fleet if it included four fishing
authorisations for Spanish vessels, not the current three – at the present time Spanish vessels rely on the
goodwill of France to let them use the French fishing authorisation possibility not used by France. The
relevance of the Protocol to Spanish vessels is further evidenced from stakeholder comments about the
extreme negative impacts that would result from not having a Protocol. With regards to longline fishing
authorisations, Spain has indicated to the European Commission that it would like to retain three longline
fishing authorisation possibilities under a future Protocol, suggesting that the current Protocol more than meets
the needs of the Spanish private sector given that it currently contains six longline fishing authorisation
possibilities.
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While the FPA has provision for a French purse seine vessel, France does not maintain any purse seine
activity in the Pacific at present, and the one purse seine fishing authorisation available for French vessels is,
on its own, deemed by French stakeholders as an insufficient basis on which to commence activities given the
benefits of vessels working in pairs/groups when searching for free schools (the focus of French activities).
During the period of the existing Protocol French vessels have not attempted to fish in the Pacific, and
consultations with stakeholders suggest that even had France had more than one fishing authorisation, it
would have been unlikely that they would have been used. So in this sense the Protocol fully meets the
current
needs of French vessels, as well as fulfilling a requirement of French vessels to retain some possibility of
fishing under the Protocol in the future should they chose to expand the area of their operations into the
Pacific.
As evidenced by stakeholder consultations, the wishes of the Portuguese purse seine sector to have one
fishing authorisation under a future Protocol, and their wish to have fished in the Pacific in recent years, both
suggest that their needs have not been met by the existing Protocol. With regards to longline fishing
authorisations, Portugal has indicated to the European Commission that it would like to retain three longline
fishing authorisation possibilities under a future Protocol, suggesting that the current Protocol more than meets
the needs of the Portuguese private sector given that it currently contains six longline fishing authorisation
possibilities.
However, based on the actual utilisation of the Protocol, its provision for longline fishing has not been relevant
for either Spain or Portugal in terms of actual longline activity, with stakeholder consultation confirming that
there are no EU longline vessels operating in tropical waters. This is because EU longline vessels in the
Pacific target swordfish in temperate waters far to the south of Kiribati waters. It is also noteworthy that the
activities of this longline fleet in the WCPO have declined significantly since the formulation of the earlier
Protocol.
The Protocol is relevant to the needs of EU consumers as evidenced by the fact that it provides for tuna
supplies to the EU market, however, the quantities are small compared to the overall EU market as shown in
Table 32, so the relevance is also small.
The Protocol is also relevant to the needs of EU processors, and stakeholder consultations confirmed that
some catch made under the Protocol is destined for processing in the EU. However, the quantity of loins from
catch made under the Protocol which is imported to the EU for processing into cans is small compared to total
EU imports as evidenced by Table 32, and so the relevance of the Protocol to EU processors is not significant.
Does the Protocol satisfy the various needs of the different interest groups in the third country?
The Protocol is relevant to Kiribati, and satisfies its needs in terms of the income generated through selling
access to its resource. As noted above, for the years 2009 to 2011, payments made by the EU under the
Protocol represented 7 %, 4 % and 7 % of national fishing licence revenue, and 1-2 % of total annual
government revenues. And as commented earlier, payments in return for access have been broadly consistent
with payments made by other countries, on both a tonnage and days basis, over the evaluation period,
although in recent years EU payments have been less than those made by other countries.
The Protocol does not however satisfy the needs/desires of Kiribati to have a Protocol which is structured
around paying for access based on vessel days.
And while the FPA has an objective for the creation of joint enterprises and support for local processing
activity, an objective which satisfies the needs of Kiribati, implementation of the Protocol has not managed to
bring about any such activity i.e. these needs have not been realised, largely for the economic reasons already
specified (see Section 3.8.4Fleets
fishing in the Kiribati EEZ)
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5
5.1
ANALYSIS OF IMPACTS AND EX-ANTE EVALUATION OF A FUTURE PROTOCOL OF
THE FISHERIES PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
Stakeholders to a future protocol and their views
The views of the stakeholders reported in this section, are the views reported to the consultants during the
consultations completed during the completion of the evaluation (see Appendix B).
Kiribati authorities
Kiribati’s Fisheries Minister, and the MFMRD are committed to following the VDS management system. They
are seeking to establish parity in their access arrangements with all countries and to sell access based on
days at sea, and not tonnage. They are also looking to establish an annual tender system which may be
introduced from 2013 onwards. A number of countries (e.g. China and Japan) whose traditional allocations
have been low, are now seeking to increase their access to the Kiribati EEZ, and the authorities in Kiribati feel
that this places them in a strong negotiating position with all countries when negotiating access. The vessel
day scheme also allows for unused days to be sold to other Pacific countries.
Kiribati would welcome a Protocol with the European Union on the basis of VDS. The benchmark figure for
access is US$ 5,000/vessel day, but the authorities are aware that higher access fees have been secured by
other Pacific island countries, up to as much as US$ 8,000/vessel day. This means that they are likely to be
reluctant to engage in a 6 year Protocol, unless the financial contribution for access was deemed to be
sufficient.
MFMRD is positive about the sectoral development component of the Protocol. There are internal struggles for
budget between the MFMRD and the Ministry of Finance, and this element of the Protocol, guarantees funding
to support fisheries specific development opportunities.
Kiribati is committed to implementing all PNA and WCPFC conservation measures. The requirement to
implement these is explicit in their Fisheries Act. Stakeholder consultations suggest that Kiribati will seek to
introduce the amendments to the 3 IAs including the increase in mesh size, closure of the high seas, and the
whale shark measure, and that these will be introduced as part of an amendment to licensing conditions for
foreign vessels fishing in Kiribati. The Kiribati Fisheries Act already contains a binding commitment to
implementing arrangements advanced through a number of international agreements including WCPFC and
PNA.
Private industry in Kiribati
Kiribati coastal fishers have no specific concerns about the activities of EU (or vessels from other countries),
and recognise that the Protocol generates support funding for the sector. There are also no perceived threats
to the sustainability of their activities posed by the activities of EU vessels.
The owners of the domestically-based purse seine fishing vessels, some of which are Spanish or South
American owned, had no specific comments on the Protocol. A representative of the private sector, Peter
Tiong, brother of the president., was not able to meet with the consultants, despite a number of attempts to
raise a meeting.
European Commission
The European Commission is in favour of a tonnage based Protocol, as the EU is not a party to the PNA, and
other FPAs in the region (Solomon Islands and Federated States of Micronesia) are tonnage based FPAs.
The European Commission recognises the importance of the Protocol to the EU private sector, and in
particular to the EU catching sector.
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The European Commission has concerns over the transparency of the VDS, and has not yet been formally
notified by the Kiribati authorities that they intend to peruse a future Protocol based on the VDS.
Other concerns of a future Protocol relate in particular to the implications of potential WCPFC management
measures which could be put into force during the lifespan of a future Protocol, and which could significantly
impact on the value-added which would be generated for the EU.
The European Commission also hopes that under a future Protocol, the Kiribati authorities will be able to
ensure more timely provision of the documentation and information needed before sectoral policy payments
can be made.
The European Commission recognises the high level of juvenile bigeye (BET) tuna catches taken by EU
vessels in the FAD fishery, and is willing to consider some direct measures to be included in the Protocol
(Annex) to mitigate this problem.
Member States in the EU and their private sector industry interests
Stakeholder consultations with Member State officials and with private sector representation suggests that the
views of Member States and their private sector are aligned. They are thus discussed here together. Member
States and the private sector in the EU, especially the Spanish purse seine vessel owners, are keen to see a
future Protocol agreed between the EU and Kiribati. Spanish vessels are very dependent on catches made in
the Kiribati EEZ, and Spain would like to have a fourth fishing authorisation possibility for Spain included in a
future Protocol to reflect the four Spanish vessels currently operating in the Pacific. Purse seine catches also
generate benefits both upstream, and downstream, in Spain. While it is unlikely that Spanish longline vessels
would use a future Protocol, Spain would like to see at least three longline fishing authorisation possibilities
retained within as future Protocol.
The French purse seine sector wishes to see a future Protocol agreed, and for its purse sine fishing
authorisation possibility to be retained even though it has no intention of using it in the short-term.
Portugal has also expressed an interest to the consultants of obtaining one purse seine authorisation to fish in
Kiribati
46
, but does not appear to have any plans to utilise the longline fishing opportunities in the future.
Portugal has also expressed a desire to the European Commission to have three longline fishing authorisation
possibilities retained in a future Protocol.
The EU private sector as a whole is concerned about the implications of potential WCPFC management
measures which could be put into force during the lifespan of a future Protocol, and which could significantly
impact on the value-added they would generate.
5.2
Sectoral policy development
In thinking ahead to a future Protocol, and noting the lack of information provided to the consultants during the
mission to Kiribati completed as part of this evaluation, the consultants make a number of observations below
with respect to the existing sectoral policy matrix in terms of its structure, content and implementation. These
observations may serve to guide sectoral policy development supported by the EU within a future Protocol.
The general impression of the consultants is that the Objectives have been accurately identified, but that
clearer distinction is required between fisheries management functions, MCS and economic development.
This would be for a vessel which is currently Mexican flagged but beneficially Portuguese owned and already fishing in the Pacific.
The intention would be to re-flag the vessel with a Portuguese flag if a fishing authorisation could be obtained for it. The vessel
(called the Chac mool) is 62m in length and has a GT of 1,279.
46
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In some cases, objectively verifiable indicators should be clearer, with means of verification better defined, so
as to ensure that the deliverables directly relate to the EU programme, as opposed to other donor support
programmes.
The Logframe
Objective 1: To promote conservation and management in the Kiribati fishing zone
1.1 To carry out MCS activities
Fish stock assessment, fisheries social and economic surveys, and stock enhancement programmes are
activities that do not sit well within an MCS objective. All would be better placed under the Objective
develop
sustainably fisheries in order to optimise economic benefits’.
MCS activities have been implemented and infringements detected. However, the achievement of three trips
per year, is itself not a sufficient deterrent to IUU fishing. Unlicensed fishing by longliners would appear to be a
specific risk for the Kiribati EEZ. Efforts should be made to increase the frequency of marine inspection under
the programme.
The logframe makes no specific reference to interaction with other MCS-coordinated activities, e.g. Operation
Kuru Kuru.
It is important to identify if surveillance at sea has been coordinated with International support
exercises such as this, or others supported by New Zealand and Australia.
No reference is made to the strengthening of the observer programme. Particular attention should be paid to
activities which relate to the FPA, most specifically, efforts should be made to monitor FAD catch and ensure
that there are no discards, in compliance with CMM 2008-01. Infringements are reported anecdotally, but no
actions have been taken, following observer debriefing.
Special attention should be paid to strengthening senior observer training and observer debriefing, and be
listed as an activity in the Logframe.
Apparent weaknesses in real-time VMS reporting have been indicated. Whilst this may have been dealt with,
the matrix should contain an indicator on the number of hours covered.
1.2 To improve management of fisheries
Development of management plans is a key priority, and is a laudable activity. However, the consultants could
not find any management plans for tuna purse seine or longline fisheries. These should be developed as a
matter of priority in conformity with PNA Implementation Arrangements and WCPFC resolutions. Specific
attention needs to be paid to vessels (domestic and FSMA) registered in Kiribati, and the status of these
vessels in terms of the application and control for management.
It is noteworthy that Fisheries Management Plans are central to the application of the Fisheries Act, so their
omission should be rectified as a matter of urgency. The Fisheries Management Plans should in themselves
contain details of specific Goals such as
Governance system strengthened, tuna resources exploited at
sustainable levels
and fishery impacts on bycatch, by-product species, ETPs and benthic vulnerabilities.
Results should be clearly defined with activities determined.
EEZ boundaries do not appear to have been finalised in the amendments to the new fisheries Act, and should
be clarified.
1.3 To Develop an Information Technology (IT) tools for fisheries management
There is evidence that IT systems have been strengthened. MFMRD now has a dedicated IT unit, and the
functionality of the VMS system and the use of the SPC TUFMAN database appears to have improved.
1.4 To increase knowledge of fisheries officials
It is apparent that in-house training has taken place. However, it is not clear whether this is directly in response
to the EU support programme, or wider regional support such as DEVFISH II. A clearer distinction should be
identified in the form of
Objectively Verifiable Indicators
and
Means of Verification,
allowing for a distinction
between the various support programmes.
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Objective 2: To develop sustainably fisheries in order to optimise economic benefits
2.1 To improve fishing techniques
It is not clear what this activity is for. It would seem that activities mentioned under Objective 1 should be
transferred to this section.
It was reported that MFMRD was encouraging use of FADs for domestic fisheries, so as to encourage some
diversification away from coastal activities. This is not mentioned in the Logframe, and would appear to be an
appropriate activity, recognising the importance of the domestic industry.
2.2 To develop a fishing infrastructure
Number of jetties built, appears to have been a deliverable outcome, and would demonstrate good visibility.
2.3 To carry-out small-scale initiatives
No comment is provided on this objective due to a lack of information available to the consultants.
2.4 To increase the revenue from foreign/local fishing authorisations
This development would appear to be in progress. However, there may be a need to address fee structures for
the growing interest by foreign longliners, seeking to target albacore, yellowfin and bigeye tuna.
Objective 3: To improve safety and quality of fishery products for export
3.1 To develop an infrastructure for fisheries export
Development of ice plants to support the domestic sector might be better placed under optimising economic
benefits. The activity appears to be taking place.
Development of transshipment support services and an improved jetty at Christmas Island could be
considered under a future Protocol with potential support under the EU 11th EDF programme, investment
banks (such as the European Investment Bank), and private sector parties (e.g. fleet owners from the EU and
other nations which might seek to use an improved facility).
3.2 To establish the Competent Authority (CA)
This activity appears to be in process with training of officers and staff in Fiji. However, the indicators have not
been reported in the log frame. It is also not clear from the matrix if this objective relates to a CA with respect
to fish health and hygiene requirements and HACCP, or to the EU IUU regulation and the implementation of a
catch certification scheme and the issuance of catch certificates. Nevertheless this objective appears to be an
important one for a future Protocol.
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5.3
Ex-ante evaluation criteria
This final section presents in short tabular form some key points based on the ex-ante evaluation criteria
specified in Article 21(1) of the 2009 EU Impact Assessment Guidelines.
Table 34: Ex-ante evaluation of the renewal of the EU/Kiribati Protocol
Ex-ante evaluation Main points for consideration
criteria
Needs to be met
Short term
(short- and long- EU needs:
term)
Maintenance of existing fishing opportunities for the EU fleet, within the context
of fishing operations within the WCP, so as to generate value-added and
employment for EU companies and citizens, and viable and sustainable
fisheries-related activities;
Contribution of fish to the EU market; and
Compliance with the covenants and obligations of the FPA.
Kiribati needs:
Funds to support the general government budget, from the sale of access to
Kiribati resources;
Funds to support sectoral policy development and implementation;
Sale of access based on rates comparable with those charged of other nations in
Kiribati and in the region; and
Compliance with the covenants and obligations of the FPA.
Long term
EU needs:
As per short-term above.
Kiribati needs:
Development of viable and sustainable fishing-related activities to include not just
upstream vessel support and transshipment services, but also catching and
processing sub-sector activity; and
Plus as per short-term above.
Added-value of EU
Requirements of the FPA for separation of funds into access payments and
involvement
support for sectoral policy development means that the sector can benefit (in
terms of management, development and improved human capacity) from having
funds ear-marked for it, rather than having monies being passed to the national
treasury;
Potential ability to have coherence between EU development policy and related
financial support, and FPA-related sectoral policy matrix implementation;
Ability of EU vessel activity in Kiritimati (Christmas island) operating under the
FPA to support island development in line with Government policy, and
potentially to leverage funds for jetty improvements; and
Potential human capacity developments of Kiribati crew (by EU vessels), and
Kiribati observers (under sectoral policy support activities or other EU
development projects.
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Objectives
achieved
to
be
The policy options
available, including
the risks associated
with them
Results and impacts
expected,
in
particular economic,
social
and
environmental
impacts
Promotion of responsible fisheries in Kiribati waters based on international
obligations and principles/best practice;
Monitoring of the results of sectoral policy implementation;
Sustainable economic and social benefits to both the EU and Kiribati arise from
the FPA;
Good economic and social governance, respective to the state of fish stocks; and
Employment of all FPA-related employment based on international obligations
and principles/best practice.
Increasing fishing authorisation possibilities, for example to address the desire of
Portugal to have a purse seine fishing authorisation and for Spain to have four
not three – associated environmental risks, and potential low fishing
authorisation utilisation;
Increasing reference tonnage – this would just reflect recent catch rates, but risks
are that a) if catch rates fell it could result in low utilisation and higher payments
by EU per tonne of fish if reference tonnage was not used, and b) if catches rates
increased further and above a new higher reference tonnage, this could mean
that the Protocol provides for fishing opportunities that would not be coherent
with responsible fisheries;
Payments based on tonnage or Vessel Days Scheme – either party may not
agree / potential/ongoing weaknesses in VDS;
Differing payment rates for access – potentially negative impacts on vessel
viability, generation of unequal benefits arising to the EU and Kiribati;
Kiribati policy option to let the market decide on payment rates per day, which
could increase rates even above the current $5,000/day
Enlargement of the protocol by including more elements concerning fisheries
governance – no real risks as long as coherence ensured with WCPFC
management and governance measures, and indeed may not be necessary
given that WCPFC addresses governance issues at the regional level, while at
the national level may also not be necessary given that sectoral policy support
covers governance issues
No Protocol – reduced ability of EU to influence responsible fisheries and no
funds earmarked for sectoral policy developments; and
WCPFC and PNA policy options with respect to FAD measures, mesh size
increases and closed high seas area around Kiribati – significant risks to EU
vessels because the cost of new net for each vessel is around
€650,000,
and
because EU vessels are dependent on the PIPA for around 30 % of their
catches. In addition it should be noted that FAD measures have been suggested
in recent reviews (see Section 3.6) as being an effective management tool from a
stock perspective, but closed areas much less so. The potential increase in mesh
size has not yet been the subject of a full evaluation to consider the potential
economic, social and environmental costs and benefits.
Considerable generation of value-added and employment in both the EU and
Kiribati;
Improved fisheries policy framework and its implementation;
Improved capacity development in Kiribati;
Contributions to responsible fisheries and improved fishing practices; and
Some negative environmental impacts in terms of bigeye tuna.
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Lessons
learned
from the past
The most appropriate
method
of
implementation
The
internal
coherence of the
proposed
programme
or
activity
and
its
relations with other
relevant instruments
Monitoring system
and the indicators
and
evaluation
arrangements
needed to measure
them
Longline possibilities have not been used.
France has not used its one fishing authorisation possibility and has no purse
seine vessels operating in the Pacific. All four fishing authorisations are currently
used by Spain and this pattern continues likely under a future Protocol, although
France prefers to retain is fishing authorisation even if not used in case of future
fleet developments in the Pacific;
Value-added benefits from the Protocol appear to be balanced in favour of the
EU, but Kiribati also generates considerable benefits from the Protocol and is
expected to do so in the future;
Compliance with the covenants and obligations contained in the legal text of the
FPA have generally been complied with, but there have been some elements of
poor performance by all parties which should be addressed under
implementation of future FPA;
Kiribati human capacity for sectoral management and MCS requires
strengthening;
The EU is favour of a tonnage-based Protocol whereas Kiribati would prefer one
based on vessel days, raising potential difficulties over agreeing a future
Protocol;
Development of joint EU/Kiribati enterprises has not taken place, and may well
be rather unrealistic in the short- to medium-term, although vessel owners have
made efforts to engage with local capacity developments and local development;
Increasingly coordinated efforts by parties in the region to bring foreign fishing
fleets within their EEZs, based on the economic benefits of doing so; and
FAD measures have been suggested in recent reviews (see Section 3.6) as
being an effective management tool from a stock perspective, while closed areas
much less so.
A Protocol that benefits all parties; and
Improved involvement of the Joint Committee.
Future Protocol likely to be coherent with CFP (and its potential reform), with
WCPFC arrangements, and with national Kiribati sectoral policy.
Use of quantitative and qualitative indicators, which are objectively verifiable, and
contained with the sectoral policy implementation matrix. Indicators to be
determined on conclusion of any future Protocol; and
Evaluation arrangements based on ex-post and ex-ante analysis.
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6
6.1
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Conclusions
Catches made by the EU purse seine fleet represented just 2 % of purse seine catches in the WCPO in 2010,
while EU longline catches accounted for less than 1 % of longline catches and 0 % of longline catches within
Pacific country EEZs. The EU longline fleet thus makes no use of the longline fishing possibilities provided by
the current FPA between the European Union and Kiribati. The EU purse seine fleet utilising the FPA, is based
out of Ecuador, and also fishes in the EPO; the fleet is very much a ‘central Pacific fleet’, unlike many other
fleets operating in the region which tend to fish predominantly in either the WCPO or the EPO.
The principal fisheries management organisation in the WCPO is the WCPFC, of which the EU is a
Commission Contracting Member. The WCPFC sets management regulations, based on scientific advice, in
efforts to ensure that fish stocks are sustainably exploited.
The PNA is a treaty-level fisheries management Agreement by an alliance of Pacific island states (to which the
EU is not therefore a party), including Kiribati, whose EEZs collectively account for a significant bulk of the
region’s tuna catch and 54 % of the purse seine catch. The VDS is a scheme under the PNA, which
establishes a system of tradable fishing days allocated to the Parties. The VDS, and other management
measures (such as closure of high seas pockets) have increasingly sought distant water fishing nations to fish
within Pacific country EEZs rather than high seas areas, and to compensate Pacific countries for access to
resources, typically to at a cost of US$5,000/vessel day (€3,731/day at the current 2012 exchange rate). There
are both strengths and weaknesses of the VDS. Current access to the EU fleet of purse seine vessels
operating in the waters of Kiribati, as specified in the Protocol, is based on payments per tonne of fish.
Except for two longline fishing authorisations which were taken in 2007 (but not used), there has been no
interest by the EU longline fleet in fishing in Kiribati under the Protocol and no catches have been made in
Kiribati waters during the Protocol. However, as evidenced by 100 % utilisation of the fishing authorisation
possibilities and very high rates of utilisation (178 % of the reference tonnage of the Protocol of 6,400 over
2007-2011, and 207 % in 2011 based on provisional catch data), the Protocol is of critical importance for the
EU purse seine fleet operating in Kiribati. Catches in Kiribati represent around 50 % of vessels catches in the
WCPO. A feature of the EU purse seine fleet operations is their higher reliance on FAD fishing compared to
many other countries fishing in Kiribati and in the region more generally.
The Protocol is of less importance for the EU upstream sector, and for the EU-downstream processing sub-
sector. However, the Protocol generates some catches which are imported in loined form for canning in the EU
(representing around 2 % of the import of loins to the EU). Fish caught under the Protocol and canned in
Ecuador for import to the EU represents around 1 % of the EU import of canned tuna. A very high percentage
(perhaps as much as 90 %) of all fish caught under the Protocol is destined for the EU market.
The Protocol contributes an average of
€1.2
mn to Kiribati in the form of financial contribution for access, and
financial support for fisheries policy implementation. This represents around 4-7 % of government fishing
licence revenue, and 1-2 % of total government revenues. In addition to these benefits, the Protocol also
generates value-added and employment in the upstream/vessel supply sector, primarily through
transshipment-related services. The Protocol has not provided any meaningful developments to the local
fishing sector in Kiribati, and there have been no joint enterprises (with shared investments) set up between
EU and Kiribati companies. However the activities of the EU fleet have contributed to human capacity
developments in Kiribati for crew, observers, and onshore labourers.
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Current stock status for the three main species of tuna caught by the EU fleet suggests that skipjack tuna is
not over-exploited, that yellowfin tuna is fully exploited, and that bigeye tuna is over-exploited. Noting the small
role of the EU fleet in the region as whole, this suggests that the vessels using the FPA, and others in the
region, may nevertheless not be exploiting just the ‘surplus stocks’ available, but may be contributing to
overfishing of bigeye tuna. It should however be noted that Kiribati has un-used vessel days in 2011 based on
the PNA VDS. There are also concerns over catches of pelagic sharks in the region, to which the EU fleet
contributes.
Payments for access to Kiribati waters per tonne of fish caught have remained constant over the period of the
Protocol, while fish prices have risen by about 50 % over the period 2006 to 2011. This may help to explain
why vessels using the FPA generate profits, and the value-added (i.e. profit plus crew earnings) made by the
catching sector, which ensure that payments made by the EU represent good value for money. It appears
however that ex-vessel prices are lower than international commodity prices paid for tuna in other main
processing locations, such as Bangkok.
The current Protocol has generated an average of
€6.4
mn per year for the EU and Kiribati combined, with the
EU accounting for 75 % of the total value-added generated. The benefit/cost ratio for the EU over the course
of the Protocol has been 4.0 i.e. for every Euro spent, 4.0 Euros of value-added have been generated for the
EU. The Protocol has also generated an estimated 98 jobs, split roughly evenly between the EU and Kiribati.
Given the payments made, this equates to
€23,810
per EU-job.
All parties (the EC, fleet owners, and the government of Kiribati), have generally complied with the covenants
and obligations laid out in the text of the Protocol. However, a particular concern, especially given the
importance and potential benefits of the sectoral support payments under the Protocol which is a unique
characteristic of Protocol compared to agreements between Kiribati and other countries (except the USA), has
been the failure of the Joint Committee to meet regularly since the commencement of the Protocol – despite
two technical meetings having taken place, one in 2008 and one in 2009, only one Joint Committee meeting
took place (in 2011). Also of concern given their potential role in contributing to responsible fisheries is the
current lack of mutual recognition by WCPFC and IATTC of observers operating in both the WCPO and the
EPO, which in turn requires vessels to have observers mandated by both organisations onboard for any trip
where vessels may fish in both the WCPO and the EPO), and the frequent failure by Kiribati observers to
provide observers reports as required.
Looking forward to a potential future Protocol, potential new management measures being considered in the
region to improve the management regime (e.g. a one month extension of the FAD closure, an increase in
minimum mesh sizes, closure of the Phoenix Island Protected Area to fishing, high seas closures around the
Kiribati EEZ) would have a negative impact on the activities and profitability of EU purse seine vessels. FAD
measures have been suggested in recent reviews as being an effective management tool from a stock
perspective, while closed areas much less so. Other changes which could have an impact if mandated by the
WCPFC include potential changes in crewing requirements to 10 % and then 20 % being from PNA countries
– this would require changes to the text of the Protocol to ensure coherence, as the text currently states a
minimum of 6 crew on the fleet of purse seiners, which represents around 5 % of current vessel crew numbers
(this figure is exceed by the EU fleet, with around 9 % of total crew already sourced from Kiribati).
It would be in the interest of both the EU and Kiribati to have a new Protocol. For the EU fleet a ‘no Protocol’
would cause fishing rights as a proportion of sales revenues to rise considerably, while for Kiribati a failure to
sign a new Protocol would eliminate the ear-marked funds for special sectoral support provided by the EU
under the Protocol. Although unlikely, a ‘no Protocol’ could also potentially also result in Kiribati not fully using
its PAE days, and it is surely the objective of the Government to ensure full utilisation (and the resulting
payments that would result).
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However, we can conclude that while all parties in principal will be supportive a new Protocol, the forthcoming
negotiations are likely to be difficult for both parties; the EU because Kiribati is strongly in favour of a Protocol
based on the VDS, and Kiribati because the EU views the VDS as having certain weaknesses. Given its PNA
obligations, Kiribati may not be able or willing to compromise on the VDS, so some solution may need to be
found that somehow merges the VDS into a tonnage based Protocol. Furthermore, assessing a ‘fair’ price for
access may be disputed by the parties involved in the forthcoming negotiations given a) recent rises in fish
prices b) static prices per paid per tonne over the course of the current Protocol, c) the ability and willingness
of the EU to have FPAs with different countries based on different payment rates, and d) the increasing
‘market’ price for vessel days in the region with the $5,000/day benchmark fee having been exceeded in some
recent bilateral agreements.
6.2
Recommendations
The recommendations made in this report are necessarily brief, given that it is not the job of the consultants to
present a strategy to the EU, rather to provide the EU negotiators with the economic data to prepare for the
negotiations. Thus the principal recommendation made is to base the negotiations on the economic and social
data provided in this report so as to ensure that there is indeed signature of a new Protocol.
The ongoing CFP reform means that there is as yet, not clear direction or guidance on changing the balance
of access per tonne between the EU and fleet owners, and the current balance should therefore be retained.
From a purely technical perspective, this evaluation recommends that the longline fishing opportunities be
removed from the Protocol or at least substantially reduced, given the fact that there have been zero catches
made by the longline fleet under the Protocol. However a final decision on this issue would also need to reflect
the political wishes and agreement by EU Member States.
Given the high level of juvenile bigeye tuna catches taken in the FAD fishery by the EU fleet, the evaluation
also recommends that direct measures should be included in the Protocol (Annex) to mitigate against this
problem. Such measures should be agreed jointly by all parties, but could include the use of, and reporting on,
FAD management plans.
The levels of payments in a future Protocol, and the basis on which they are paid (e.g. tonnage or vessel
days), will be the subject of negotiation, but should be informed by recent catch levels and rates of utilisation.
A firm recommendation however is made for greater emphasis and recognition by all parties of the importance
of the Joint Committee meetings. These meetings represent a vital monitoring mechanism for implementation
of the FPA – a mechanism which has historically not been especially effective. The Joint Committee meetings
must be yearly as required in the text of the FPA, and should be used both to review sectoral policy
implementation, and to ensure ongoing compliance with the covenants and obligations laid out in the FPA (and
necessary action of such if compliance is found to be lacking). Current areas of weakness in compliance with
other covenants and obligations required in the FPA, as highlighted in Appendix C should also be addressed
as a matter of urgency.
The evaluation recommends that any future Protocol, and its implementation firmly align sectoral policy
support with the Government’s development and sectoral policy. Within this context focus should be given to
the issue of improved MCS capacity in Kiribati and efforts aimed at reducing IUU fishing and at supporting
responsible fishing by both EU and Kiribati fishers. FPA sectoral funds, and other EU development support,
could be used to enhance observer capacities and reporting for example and to ensure mutual recognition by
WCPFC and IATTC of each other’s’ observers.
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The evaluation also recommends greater recognition by EU development projects of the important nature of
the Kiribati FPA, and therefore for the use of funds to support Kiribati. The view of this evaluation is that there
should be a special effort to better align sectoral policy support provided by the FPA with other EU
development aid in a mutually enforcing manner, while taking care to avoid duplication of efforts. This could be
supported by the appointment of a fisheries attaché to the EU Delegation in Fiji, and the EU is believed to be
in process of recruiting someone to such a position.
Finally, the evaluation recommends the active participation by the EU within the WCPFC, so as to ensure
responsible fisheries. Most specifically, an important support action would be to encourage the setting of
Target and Limit Reference points across the three tuna species with explicit management measures tied to
these, but most specifically in provision of support to strengthen the VDS.
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APPENDICES
Appendix A: References
ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK, 2008. - Country operations Business Plan, 2009-2011.
ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK (ADB), 2009. - Country Operations Business Plan, Kiribati, 2009-2011.
AUSTRALIAN AID, 2009. - Australia-Kiribati Partnership for Development.
CLARKE S., 2011. - An indicator based analysis of key shark species data held by SPC-OFP, WCPFC SC 7,
EB WP-01.
DAVIES N., HOYLE S., HARLEY S., LANGLEY A., KLEIBER P. & HAMPTON J., 2011. - Stock Assessment of
Bigeye Tuna in the WCPO, WCPFC-SC7-2011/SA- WP-02.
DEVFISH II, 2008. - EDF Concept note, Development of Sustainable Tuna Fisheries in Pacific ACP Countries
Phase 2 – (DevFish II),
http://www.ffa.int/system/files/%252Fhome/ffaadmin/%252Ffiles/ffa/DEVFISH%20Phase%20II%20concept%2
0note.pdf
EUROPEAN COMMISSION, 2000. - Partnership Agreement
2000/483/EC
between the members of the
African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States of the one part, and the European Community and its Member
States, of the other part, signed in Cotonou on 23 June 2000.
EUROPEAN COMMISSION, 2002. - COMMISSION REGULATION (EC, EURATOM) No 2342/2002 of 23
December 2002 laying down detailed rules for the implementation of Council Regulation (EC, Euratom) No
1605/2002 on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities.
EUROPEAN COMMISSION, COM. - 2002. 637 final, Communication from the commission on an integrated
framework for fisheries partnership agreements with third countries,
http://eur-
lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=COM:2002:0637:FIN:EN:PDF
EUROPEAN COMMISSION, 2006. - Communication from the Commission to the Council, the European
Parliament and the European Economic and Social Committee of 29 May 2006 – EU relations with the Pacific
islands – A strategy for a strengthened partnership [COM(2006)
l248
– Official Journal C 184 of 8 August
2006].
EUROPEAN COMMISSION, 2007. - Council Regulation (EC) No. 893/2007 of 23 July 2007 on the
conclusion of a Fisheries Partnership Agreement between the European Community, on the one hand, and the
Republic of Kiribati, on the other.
EUROPEAN COMMISSION, 2008. - Proposal for a Council Decision of 16 December 2008 on the signature
and provisional application of the Interim Partnership Agreement between the European Community, of the
one part, and the Pacific States, of the other part [COM(2008)
858
final – Not published in the Official Journal.
EUROPEAN COMMISSION, 2008. - Council Regulation (EC) No. 1006/2008 of 29 September 2008
concerning authorisations for fishing activities of Community fishing vessels outside Community waters and
the access of third country vessels to Community waters.
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EUROPEAN COMMISSION, 2009. – Impact assessment guidelines. 15 January 2009.
EUROPEAN COMMISSION, 2010. - Second revision of the Cotonou Agreement, consolidated agreed texts,
March, 2010.
EUROPEAN DEVELOPMENT FUND, 2008. - Kiribati-European Community EDF 10, Country strategy paper
and national indicative programme, for the period 2008-2013,
http://ec.europa.eu/development/icenter/repository/scanned_ki_csp10_en.pdf
EUROPEAN DEVELOPMENT FUND, Pacific Region, 2008. - EDF Regional strategy paper and regional
indicative programme for the period, 2008 – 2013,
http://ta2rao.org/Strategy%20Papers/10thEDF_RSP.pdf
EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT (EP), 2007. - ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly of 22 November
2007document
P6_TA (2007) 0022).
FAO, 2011. - Food Security statistics,
http://www.fao.org/fileadmin/templates/ess/documents/food_security_statistics/country_profiles/eng/Kiribati_E.
pdf
FFA, 2010. - The FFA Harmonised Minimum Terms and Conditions for Foreign Fishing Vessel Access
Available from
http://www.ffa.int/mtcs
FFA, 2011. - Vessels of Good Standing
http://www.ffa.int/node/42.
FFA, 2011. - Working papers on the evolution of a harvest control strategy for Albacore tuna.
GEEN G., 2000. - Review of the Palau Arrangement for the Management of the Western Pacific Purse Seine
Fishery, Report to the VDS Committee.
GILLETT R., 2007. - A short history of industrial fishing in the Pacific islands, Rap Publication 2007/22.
GOVERNMENT OF KIRIBATI, 2010. - Fisheries management in Kiribati is governed by the Act for
Conservation, Management and Development of Kiribati Fisheries and control of Foreign Fishing and for
Connected purposes.
HAMPTON J., 2009 - Implications for scientific data collection by observers of new requirements for 100%
observer coverage of purse seiners. WCPFC-SC5-2009/ST-WP-6. Available from
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/st-
wp-06/john-hampton-implications-scientific-data-collection-observers-new-requirements-100-obs
HAMPTON J. & HARLEY S., 2011. - Review of the implementation and effectiveness of MM 2008-01,
WCPFC8 -2011-43,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/wcpfc8-2011-43/review-implementation-and-effectiveness-cmm-
2008-01
HARLEY S.J., HOYLE S., WILIAMS P., HAMPTON J. & KLEIBER P., 2010. - Stock assessment of bigeye
tuna in the western and central Pacific Ocean.WCPFC-SC6-2010/SA-WP-04. Nuku’alofa, Tonga, 10-19
August 2010. Available from
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/sa-wp-04/harley-s-1-s-hoyle-1-a-langley-a-2-j-hampton-
1-and-p-kleiber-3-stock-assessment-bigeye-
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HOYLE S., KLEIBER P., DAVIES N., LANGLEY A. & HAMPTON J., 2011. - Stock assessment of skipjack
tuna in the Western, Central Pacific, WCFPC, SC 7, 2011, SA WP-04,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/sa-wp-
04/stock-assessment-skipjack-tuna-western-and-central-pacific-ocean
IATTC, 2011. - Fishery Status Report—Informe de la Situación de la Pesquería No. 9. TUNAS AND
BILLFISHES IN THE EASTERN PACIFIC OCEAN IN 2010 LOS ATUNES Y PECES PICUDOS EN EL
OCÉANO PACÍFICO ORIENTAL EN 2010
http://www.iattc.org/PDFFiles2/FisheryStatusReports/FisheryStatusReport9ENG.pdf
IATTC, 2011b. - RESOLUTION C-11-01. RESOLUTION ON A MULTIANNUAL PROGRAM FOR THE
CONSERVATION OF TUNA IN THE EASTERN PACIFIC OCEAN IN 2011-2013
http://www.iattc.org/PDFFiles2/Resolutions/C-11-01-Tuna-conservation-2011-2013.pdf
IMF, 2011. - Kiribati IMF Country Report No. 11/114, May, 2011
(http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2011/cr11114.pdf
LANGLEY A., WILLIAMS P. & HAMPTON J., 2008. - The Western and Central Pacific Tuna Fishery: 2006
Overview and Status of Stocks. Secretariat of the Pacific Community Oceanic Fisheries Programme Tuna
Fisheries Assessment Report No. 8. Available at:
http://www.spc.int/OceanFish/Docs/Research/TFAR_2006_No8%20final.pdf, WCPFC, SC 2 2006, EB WP-1.
LANGLEY A. D. & HAMPTON J., 2008. - Stock assessment of skipjack tuna in the Western and Central
Pacific Ocean. Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission.WCPFC-SC4-2008/SA-WP-4. Port
Moresby, Papua New Guinea, 11-22 August 2008.
LANGLEY A., HOYLE S., & HAMPTON J., 2011. - Stock assessment of yellowfin tuna in Western Central
Pacific, WCPFC SC 7, 2011 SA, WP-03,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/sa-wp-03/stock-assessment-yellowfin-tuna-
western-and-central-pacific-ocean
LAWSON T., 2011. - Estimation of catch rates and catches of key shark species in tuna fisheries of the
Western Central Pacific Ocean, WCPFC, SC7, 2011, EB IP 02.
LEHODEY P., SENINA I., CALMETTES B., HAMPTON. J., NICOL S., WILLIAMS P., MOLINA J., OGURA M.,
KIYOFUJI H. & OKAMOTO S., 2011. - SEAPODYM working progress and applications to Pacific skipjack tuna
population and fisheries. WCPFC-SC7-2011/EB-WP 06 rev. 1 http://www.wcpfc.int/node/3633.
KIRBY D.S., 2006. - An ecological risk assessment for species caught in WCPO longline and purse seine
fisheries: inherent risk as determined by productivity-susceptibility analysis. Second Scientific Committee
Meeting of the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission, Manila, Philippines, 7-18 August 2006.
WCPFC-SC2-EB SWG/WP-1.
Available from
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/eb-wp-1/ecological-risk-assessment-
species-caught-wcpo-longline-and-purse-seine-fisheries
MIYAKE M., GUILLOTREAU P., SUN C. H. & ISHIMURA G., 2010. - Recent developments in the tuna
industry: stocks, fisheries, management, processing, trade and markets. FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture
Technical Paper. No. 543. Rome, FAO. 2010. 125p.
MOLONY.B., 2007. - Overview of purse-seine and longline bycatch issues in the Western and Central Pacific
Ocean. Paper prepared for the Inaugural Meeting of the Asia and Pacific islands Bycatch Consortium,
Honolulu, 15–16 February 2007.
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MINISTRY OF FINANCE AND ECONOMY, 2008-2011 - Development Kiribati Development Plan.
http://www.sprep.org/att/irc/ecopies/countries/kiribati/87.pdf
OCEANIC DEVELOPPEMENT & MEGAPESCA LDA, 2009. - Specific contract No. 17 - Overall Evaluation
Study of the Fisheries Partnership Agreements (under Framework Contract FISH/2006/20), July 2009.
OCEANIC DEVELOPPEMENT & MEGAPESCA LDA, 2008. - Specific contract No. 4 – Establishment of a
Framework Contract Management Unit (FCMU) to manage, monitor and coordinate the activities under the
framework management unit and the relevant specific agreements - Specific Methodological Guidelines for
Evaluation of Fisheries Partnership Agreements (under Framework Contract FISH/2006/11).
OCEANIC DEVELOPPEMENT & MEGAPESCA LDA, 2006. - Specific Agreement No. 32 – Kiribati Report –
Ex-post evaluation of the current Protocol to the Fisheries Agreement between the European Community and
the Republic of Kiribati, and analysis of the impact of the future Protocol on sustainability, including ex-ante
evaluation (under Framework Contract FISH/2003/02), August 2006.
OCEANIC DEVELOPPEMENT, MEGAPESCA LDA, & POSEIDON, 2005. - The European Tuna Sector.
Economic situation, prospects, and analysis of the impact of the liberalisation of trade. Specific Convention 12.
Internal document.
PNA, 1982. - Nauru Agreement Concerning Cooperation in the Management of Fisheries of Common Interest.
Available from
http://www.ffa.int/nauru_Agreement
PNA, 1983. - An Arrangement Implementing The Nauru Agreement Setting Forth Minimum Terms And
Conditions of Access to the Fisheries Zones of the Parties,
http://www.spc.int/coastfish/Countries/nauru/nfmra/laws/PNA_First Implementing Arrangement.pdf
PNA, 1990. - A Second Arrangement Implementing The Nauru Agreement Setting Forth Minimum Terms And
Conditions of Access to The Fisheries Zones of The
Parties.http://www.spc.int/coastfish/countries/nauru/nfmra/laws/PNA_Second_Implementing_Arrangement.pdf
PNA, 1994. - Federated States of Micronesia Arrangement for Regional Fisheries Access,
http://www.ffa.int/node/30#attachments
PNA, 1995. - The Palau Arrangement,
http://www.ffa.int/node/91#attachments
PNA, 2004. - Palau Arrangement for the Management of the Western Pacific Purse Seine Fishery (As
Amended), as revised by the Ninth Annual Meeting of the Parties to the Palau Arrangement, 18-19 May, 2004.
Available from
http://www.ffa.int/system/files/%252Fhome/ffaadmin/%252Ffiles/ffa/Palau%20Arrangement.pdf
PNA, 2008. - A 3
rd
Arrangement Implementing the Nauru Agreement Setting Forth Minimum Terms and
Conditions of Access to The Fisheries Zones of The
Parties.http://www.spc.int/coastfish/countries/nauru/nfmra/laws/PNA_Third_Implementing_Arrangement.pdf
PNA, 2010. - Vessel records (Unpublished).
PNA, 2010. -
Statement by PNA Chair Glen Joseph to the Sixth Session of the WCPFC Technical and Compliance
Committee on the Conservation Measure to Prohibit Setting on Whale Sharks.
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PNA, 2010. - Resolution of the PNA of the PNA Ministers to Amend the Third Arrangement Implementing the
Nauru Agreement setting forth additional terms and conditions of access to the Fisheries Zones of the Parties.
PNA, 2011. - Memorandum of Understanding between the Parties to the Palau Arrangement on the minimum
bench mark fee for a vessel day, 20
th
July, 2011.
PNA, 2011. - Working paper on the evolution of a longline vessel day scheme for bigeye and yellowfin tuna.
SIBERT J., SENINA I. & LEHODEY P., 2011. - Prospects for effective conservation of bigeye tuna stocks in
the Western Central Pacific Ocean. WCPFC SC 7, August, 2011.
SCICOFISH, 2008. - EDF Concept note (2008), Pacific Region/Scientific Support for the Management of
Coastal and Oceanic Fisheries in the Pacific islands Region () CRIS No. FED/2009/21370,
http://ec.europa.eu/europeaid/documents/aap/2009/af_aap_2009_pacific.pdf
SMACFISH l., 2008. - EDF Project Concept Note, Sustainable management of aquaculture and coastal
fisheries in the Pacific region for food security and small-scale livelihoods,
http://www.spc.int/DigitalLibrary/Doc/FAME/Meetings/HOF/6/BP2.pdf
SPC, 2009. - SPC Division of Fisheries, Aquaculture and Marine Ecosystems (FAME): strategic plan 2010-
2013.
SPC, 2011. - Catch by EEZ Distribution_xls.
UNICEF, 2008. - Food price increases, nutrition security in the Pacific islands
http://www.unicef.org/pacificislands/Report_1_Food_Price_UNICEF_Pacific_for_OG1.pdf
WCPFC, 2004. - First Session of the Commission Summary
Record,http://www.wcpfc.int/meetings/2004/inaugural-session-commission
WCPFC, 2009. - Review of CCMs Implementation of, and Compliance With, Conservation and Management
Measures, WCPFC-TCC5-2008
47
/31 (Rev1). Available from
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/wcpfc-tcc5-200931-
rev1/review-ccms-implementation-and-compliance-with-conservation-and-management
WCPFC, 2009. - Commission for the Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean, ,Sixth regular session, Papeete, French Polynesia 7–11 December 2009.
Available at
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/wcpfc6-summary-report-final
WCPFC, 2010. - Tuna fishery yearbook, 2010. - OFP, SPC.
WCPFC SC7, 2011. - Summary report,
Scientific Committee Seventh Regular Session, Pohnpei, Federated.States
of Micronesia, 9-17 August 2011.
WCPFC, 2011. 3rd ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE REGIONAL OBSERVER PROGRAMME WCPFC8-2011/24.
WCPFC CMM 2007-02. - Commission Vessel Monitoring scheme.
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2007-
02/commission-vessel-monitoring-system
47
Should
be 2009
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WCPFC CMM 2008-01. - Conservation and management measure for yellowfin and bigeye tuna in the WCPO,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2008-01/conservation-and-management-measure-bigeye-and-yellowfin-tuna-
western-and-central-pa
WCPFC CMM 2008-03. - Conservation and management of sea turtles,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2008-
03/conservation-and-management-sea-turtles
WCPFC 2009-02. - High Seas FAD closure and catch retention,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2009-
02/conservation-and-management-measure-application-high-seas-fad-closures-and-catch-ret
WCPFC CMM 2008-03. - Conservation and management of sea turtles,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2008-
03/conservation-and-management-sea-turtles
WCPFC CMM 2009-06. - Conservation and management measure on the regulation of transshipment,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2009-06/conservation-and-management-measure-regulation-transshipment-0
WCPFC CMM 2010-03. - Conservation and management measure for compliance monitoring scheme,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-2010-03/conservation-and-management-measure-compliance-monitoring-
scheme
WCPFC CMM 2010-07. - Conservation and management measure for sharks,
http://www.wcpfc.int/doc/cmm-
2010-03/conservation-and-management-measure-compliance-monitoring-scheme
Williams, P. and Terawasi, P. 2011. - Overview of Tuna Fisheries in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean,
including Economic Conditions, 2009. Available from
www.wcpfc.int/.../WCPFC-SC7-2010-GN-WP-
01_WCPO_Overview_2010.pdf.
WORLD BANK, 2011. - Global economic trends, data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.MKTP.CD.
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Appendix B: Persons consulted
Name
In the Pacific
Dr. Transform Aqorau
Tinian Reiher
Mr. Beero Tioti
Mr. Kauto Toganibeia
Ms. Aketa Taanga
Ms. Mbwenea Teioki
Mr. Kaon Tiamere
Mr. Tekirua Riing
Mr. Taremon Korere
Mr. Ruria Iteraera
Mr. Sergei Dodzin
Mr. Yi Xiong
Mr. Tobias Haque
Mr. Xianyong (Eric) Gao
Mr. John Hampton
Mr. Peter Williams
Mr. Len Rodwell
Mr. Anton Jimwererly
In the EU
Dr. Julio Morón
Dr. Juan Pedro Monteagudo
Dr. Michel Goujon
Susana Salvador
Mr. Johathan Lemeunier
Mr.Constantin Alexandrou
Dr. Marek Beran
Ms. Gosia Lachut
Position, Organisation
CEO, PNA Office
Minister of Fisheries, Kiribati
Director – MFMRD
Resource Policy Advisor MFMRD-
Senior Fisheries Officer (Offshore Fisheries) – MFMRD
MCS
Senior Licensing Officer
Senior Observer coordinator
VMS officer
Legal officer
Senior Economist, Asia Pacific Dept, IMF
Economist, IMF
Economist, Pacific, World bank, Fiji
International officer, Public/ private partnerships
SPC-OFP
SP-OFP
FFA
PNA Administrator
Director Gerente, OPAGAC. Spain
Asesor Cientifico, OPAGAC. Spain
Directeur, Orthongel, France
Chefe de Divisão de Recursos Externos. Direcção-Geral das
Pescas e Aquicultura. Portugal
Head of the European and International Affairs Unit, Maritime
Fisheries and Aquaculture Directorate, Ministry in charge of
Fisheries, France
Head of Unit DG MARE.B.3, European Commission
Administrator for Greenland and Pacific. DG MARE B.3,
European Commission
Desk Officer
Kiribati, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu. Pacific
Division, Asia-Pacific Department. European External Action
Service
Deputy Head of Unit DG MARE.B.3 European Commission
DG MARE.B.3
European Commission
DG MARE.B.3, Control and Inspection issues, European
Commission
DG MARE.B.2, European Commission, fishing authorisation
and catch data officer
Mr. Emmanuel Berck
Mr. Alan Gray
Mr. Mario Alcaide
Mr. Yann Davalo
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Dr. Pavlina Nikolova
Mr. Pawel Swiderek
Ms. Ana-Maria Caraman
Mr. Attila Schoenbaum
Mr. Dominique Phillipe Levieil
Mr. Thierry Soyez
DG MARE.B.1, European Commission, administrator for
WCPFC
DG MARE B.4. (trade issues)
DG MARE A4 (IUU issues in the Pacific)
DG MARE.F.2, European Comission, evaluation and impact
assessment coordination in DG MARE
DG MARE.C.3, European Commission, Spain desk officer
DG DEVCO, desk officer for Kiribati
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Appendix C: Compliance with key covenants and obligations in the Agreement, Protocol and Annex
Article,
Chapter,
Section,
Para.
Art, para
5.2
Covenant
Compliance
status (yes,
no, partial,
n/a,
unknown)
Justification, explanation, evidence, and any additional
comments
Basis for evaluation of
compliance status e.g. source
of information
The Agreement
Access by Community vessels to fisheries in Kiribati
waters
The Kiribati authorities shall notify the Commission of any
amendments to that legislation and to any other legislation
which may have an impact on fishing legislation
Partial
The new Kiribati Act for the Conservation, Management and
Development of Kiribati Fisheries and Control of Foreign
Fishing and for Connected Purposes (2010) was notified to
the EC, but not until the Joint Committee meeting in 2011.
The reason being that the Kiribati authorities prefer to use
bilateral discussions as the medium of exchange.
PNA/WCPFC decisions are discussed through the WCPFC
TCC meetings. WCPFC members report through the annual
TCC Part 2 report which provides details of changes to
legislation and compliance with the measures.
Licence applications received and vessels owners informed
by September in time for fishing season which commences
There are two separate bank accounts as per the
requirements. However payments according the timeframes
specified have not always taken place - see comments under
Protocol Article 2.5 below on timing.
The strategy for managing the financial contribution is based
on the MFMRD Four-Year Strategic Plan (2010-2013) and
presented within the Sectoral Policy matrix. However,
irregular and delayed payments for sectoral policy have
meant that the programme has only been operational since
the second half of 2011.
The financial contribution payments are in principle made
yearly. But see comments under Protocol Article 2.5 below
on timing. Kiribati has also received payments from industry
based on their tonnages.
Kiribati legislation / letters from
Kiribati authorities to the EU /
consultations with owners and
EU / meeting minutes
6.1
7.1
Licences/fishing authorisations
Community vessels may fish in the Kiribati fishing zone only if
they have a valid fishing licence issued under this Agreement
Financial contribution
The Community shall grant Kiribati a financial contribution in
accordance with the terms and conditions laid down in the
Protocol and Annexes
The financial contribution shall be determined and managed in
the light of objectives identified by common accord between the
parties in accordance with the Protocol, to be achieved in the
context of the sectoral fisheries policy drawn up by the
Government of Kiribati and an annual and multiannual
programme for its implementation
The financial contribution granted by the Community shall be paid
each year in accordance with the Protocol
Yes
Yes
Licence records in Kiribati
EU records of payments /
Kiribati record of monies
received
Strategy plan, and sectoral
policy matrix / payment records
7.2
Partial
7.3
Partial
EU records of payments /
Kiribati record of monies
received
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Article,
Chapter,
Section,
Para.
Covenant
Compliance
status (yes,
no, partial,
n/a,
unknown)
Partial
Justification, explanation, evidence, and any additional
comments
Basis for evaluation of
compliance status e.g. source
of information
8.2
Promoting cooperation among economic operators and in
civil society
The parties shall encourage exchanges of information on fishing
techniques and gear, preservation methods and the industrial
processing of fisheries products
8.4
The parties shall undertake to implement an action plan between
Kiribati and Community operators, with the aim of developing
local landings of Community vessels
No / Partial
There has been no formal expression of interest or requests
from Kiribati authorities or the Kiribati private sector to the EU
for information on such issues. But more general exchange
of views takes place through WCPFC, technical meetings,
and Joint Committee meetings.
In addition, the EU fleet owners have shown the authorities
how things are done on board, processes for loading,
handling. And there is some exchange of knowledge from
Kiribati crew onboard, and Kiribati observers.
Vessels make transshipments in Tarawa and Kiritimati
(Christmas Island). There is an MoU between OPAGAC and
the government (updated yearly) covering observers,
stevedores, cooperation in field of cargo vessel provision for
inter-island transport (a donated vessel), and a salt project in
Christmas.
But there is no formal action plan to develop local landings.
This is explained by the fact that there is no commercial
incentive for EU fleet owners to land product in Kiribati as
there are no processing facilities, and catches are
landed/processed in South America. The economics of
operating a processing operation, other than perhaps for
fresh sashimi product, would be very marginal. Low
productivity of domestic workers, allied to competing with
Ecuador, would suggest that efforts to develop local landings
would never be likely to succeed.
Documentation
showing
evidence of exchanges of
information / consultations
Documented action plan (or lack
of) and evidence of its
implementation as obtained
through consultations
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Article,
Chapter,
Section,
Para.
8.5
Covenant
The parties shall encourage, in particular, the setting up of joint
enterprises in their mutual interest which shall systematically
comply with Kiribati and Community legislation
Compliance
status (yes,
no, partial,
n/a,
unknown)
No
Justification, explanation, evidence, and any additional
comments
Basis for evaluation of
compliance status e.g. source
of information
Consultations with DG MARE,
Kiribati authorities, and private
sector in EU and Kiribati on
demand and feasibility for such
joint enterprises
There are no real joint investments in the sense of shared
ownership/assets, and the private sector in Kiribati is not
sufficiently developed for that.
However OPAGAC employ CCPL (a local agent) with 40
people on permanent contract as stevedores.
There are four FSMA vessels, which are registered/flagged in
Kiribati, and one is Spanish owned (the
Pacific Star).
However, it does not provide any direct benefits to Kiribati,
and the FSM arrangement is not proving to be effective in
attracting local investment as was originally intended.
All these functions are theoretically performed by the Joint
Committee. However, the Joint Committee’s first meeting
was not until April 2011 although there were technical
meetings in 2008 and 2009.
It took Kiribati some time to leverage funds from the Ministry
of Finance, which it has now done successfully
In principle the parties try/seek to, but yearly meetings have
not always taken place due to diary clashes, distance and
logistical issues of travel, and other meetings being given
priority by both parties. There was however a technical
meeting in December 2008 and December 2009, and a Joint
Committee meeting in April 2011.
9.1
Joint Committee
The Joint Committee shall perform the following functions:
monitoring performance of agreement, liaison, forum for dispute
settlement, assessing level of fishing opportunities
Partial
Minutes of Joint Committee
meetings
9.2
The Joint Committee shall meet in principle once a year
Partial
Minutes of Joint Committee
meetings
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Article,
Chapter,
Section,
Para.
Art, para
2.5
Covenant
Compliance
status (yes,
no, partial,
n/a,
unknown)
Partial
Justification, explanation, evidence, and any additional
comments
Basis for evaluation of
compliance status e.g. source
of information
Protocol
Financial contribution — Methods of payment
Payment of the financial contribution referred to in paragraph 1
shall be made no later than 30 June 2007 for the first year and
no later than 30 June 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012
for the following years
Payments made but there have been delays. These delays
appear due to a failure by the Kiribati authorities to provide
information required before payments can be made. For
example there were some delays in payments for normal
contributions due to bank account details not being provided
in time. And one sectoral policy payment has been delayed
due the fact that there was no JC meeting and that Kiribati
did not provide requested documents. To be able to launch
the payment the next JC Meeting needs to agree on the
planned and actual implementation of the sectoral policy, and
this is expected to be completed during the next JCM.
Shipowners are paying on time
This takes place through the WCPFC.
EU records of payments /
Kiribati record of monies
received
3.2
Cooperation on responsible fishing — Annual scientific
meeting
During the period covered by this Protocol, the Community and
the Kiribati authorities shall monitor the state of resources in
the Kiribati fishing zone
Yes
Consultations with EU and
Kiribati Authorities to assess
their engagement with stock
monitoring e.g. participation in
annual meeting of the Palau
Agreement, WCPFC meetings,
etc.
Records on individual vessel
landings
4.1
7.1
Review of fishing opportunities by mutual agreement
The fishing opportunities referred to in Article 1 may be increased
by mutual agreement provided that the conclusions of the annual
meeting of the 'Palau Arrangement' members and the annual
review of the status of stocks made by the Secretariat of the
Pacific Community confirm that such an increase will not
endanger the sustainable management of Kiribati resources
Promotion of responsible fishing in Kiribati waters
30 % of the total amount of the financial contribution shall be
allocated the first year to the support and implementation of
initiatives taken in the context of the sectoral fisheries policy. This
percentage is fixed at 40 % the second year and at 60 % the year
n/a
Fishing opportunities remain at 4 purse seine and 12 longline
vessels i.e. fishing opportunities have not been increased.
However under VDS scheme, there may be opportunity to
increase access under the Palau Agreement VDS scheme.
Yes
The % of the total contribution allocated for sectoral has
increased.
Monies going into the two different
bank accounts in Kiribati. Review
of fisheries sector budgets.
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Article,
Chapter,
Section,
Para.
7.2
Covenant
Compliance
status (yes,
no, partial,
n/a,
unknown)
Partial
Justification, explanation, evidence, and any additional
comments
Basis for evaluation of
compliance status e.g. source
of information
7.4
thereafter
As soon as this Protocol enters into force and no later than three
months after that date, the Community and Kiribati shall agree,
within the Joint Committee provided for in Article 9 of the
Agreement, on a multiannual sectoral programme and detailed
implementing rules covering annual and multiannual guidelines,
objectives, evaluating the results
For each year of application of the Protocol after the first year,
Kiribati shall notify the Community of the allocation to fisheries
sectoral policy no later than 1 March of the year concerned
This was not done through the Joint Committee, which did not sit
until 2011. But it took place and was agreed by exchange of
letters and presented in the Sectoral Policy matrix in the technical
meeting
The Planning Department in Kiribati monitors the outcomes
This has not been systematic each year in terms of the allocation
to specific chapters/activities, even though the Kiribati authorities
have been reminded of its importance by letters.
Review of multiannual sectoral
programme
and
detailed
implementing rules
Partial
Documentation from Kiribati to the
EU providing notification, in due
time.
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Article,
Chapter,
Section,
Para.
Ch, Sect,
para
I 1.1-1.3
Covenant
Compliance
status (yes,
no, partial,
n/a,
unknown)
Justification, explanation, evidence, and any additional
comments
Basis for evaluation of
compliance status e.g. source
of information
Annex
Registration
Fishing by Community vessels within the Kiribati fishing zone
shall be subject to the issuance of a registration number by the
Kiribati competent authorities. Applications for registration shall
be made on the form provided for that purpose by the Kiribati
authorities
Licences/Fishing authorisations
The Community authorities shall present to the Ministry
responsible for fisheries in Kiribati an application for each
vessel wishing to fish under the Agreement at least 15 days
before the date of commencement of the period of validity
requested
Applications shall be submitted to the Ministry responsible for
fisheries in Kiribati on a form drawn up in accordance with the
specimen in Appendix I, and accompanied by proof of
payment and other necessary documents or certificates
Licences for all vessels shall be issued to shipowners or their
agents via the Delegation of the Commission of the European
Communities to Kiribati (the Delegation) within 15 days of
receipt of all the documents
Validity and fees
The final statement of the fees due for year n shall be drawn up
by the Commission of the European Communities by 30 June of
the year n + 1 at the latest on the basis of the catch declarations
made by each shipowner and confirmed by the scientific
institutes responsible for verifying catch data in the Member
States. The statement shall simultaneously be notified to the
Ministry responsible for fisheries in Kiribati and the shipowners for
checking and approval
Any additional payments shall be made by the shipowners to the
competent Kiribati authorities by 30 September of the following
year at the latest, into the Kiribati Government account No 1
Yes
Registration
records,
application forms provided
and
I 2.4
Yes
OPAGAC agent works with Government to ensure that this
takes place. And this always takes place in advance. Vessels
are all on FFA good standing register.
Date of licence applications vs.
commencement date of validity
I 2.5 and
2.6
I 2.9
Yes
Licence application forms and
receipts of payment
Fishing authorisations are issued in time, but usually direct to
the shipowners because the Delegation to Kiribati is based in
Fiji.
Normal fee payments are always made within the time limit.
Payments for excess catches have been generally been
made at the end of the year n+1
There is a data inconsistency between SPC and IEO which
has been raised at the two formal technical meetings.
Consultation
owners
with
EU
fleet
Yes/No
I 3.4 and
3.5
Partial
EU records and copy
communications
made
Kiribati
of
to
I 3.6
Partial
See above
Records of Kiribati receipt of
monies
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Article,
Chapter,
Section,
Para.
II 1-3
Covenant
Compliance
status (yes,
no, partial,
n/a,
unknown)
Yes
Justification, explanation, evidence, and any additional
comments
Basis for evaluation of
compliance status e.g. source
of information
III 1.
III 3.1
III 8.
IV 1.
IV 4.
IV 6.
IV 7.
Fishing zones
Vessels not authorised to fish in closed areas, within 12nm of
base lines, within 3 n.m of FADs, and within 60nm from
baselines of the islands of Tarawa, Kanton, and Kiritimati
Catch reporting arrangements and landings declarations
Captains shall provide the Director of Fisheries with
information relating to the time, position of, and catch on
board of the licensed fishing vessel before entering zone,
while in zone, before entry into ports, after transhipping, prior
to refuelling
Vessels shall declare their catches on the corresponding
sheet in the logsheet, in accordance with the specimen in
Appendix III A and III B
The shipowners of purse seine vessels shall provide copy of
the landing receipt after completion of every fishing trip that
took place totally or in part within the Kiribati fishing zone
Embarking seamen
For the fleet of tuna seiners, at least six ACP seamen shall be
signed on during the tuna fishing season in the Kiribati fishing
zone. For the fleet of surface longliners, at least four ACP
seamen shall be signed on during the fishing season in the
Kiribati fishing zone
Where contracts have been signed with Kiribati nationals, in
accordance with point 1 of this Article, the shipowner or agent
shall inform the competent Kiribati authorities of the names of
the local seamen taken on board the vessel concerned
Kiribati seamen will be given employment contracts, which
will guarantee the seamen the social security cover, applicable
to them, including life assurance and sickness and accident
insurance
The wage conditions granted to local seamen shall not be
lower than those applied to Kiribati [other?] crews and shall
under no circumstances be below IL0 standards
Monitoring and control records
Yes
Fax and email records held by
Director of Fisheries (subject to
III 7.
Logsheets
Landing
receipt
records
provided by owners to Kiribati
authorities
Crewing is done through the Agency at Christmas island. 2-3
of crew on each vessel are from Kiribati.
Consultations with EU fleet
owners
Yes
Yes
Yes
Unknown
Not clear whether information is forthcoming from the Agency
Records
provided
shipowners or agents
Department of Fisheries
Consultations
by
to
Yes
Yes
Consultations
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Article,
Chapter,
Section,
Para.
IV 9. And
10.
Covenant
V
VI 2.
Where no ACP seamen are taken on board Community
shipowners shall be obliged to pay, for each day of the fishing
trip in the waters of the ACP country concerned, a flat-rate
amount of EUR 20 per day. Upon its entry into the Kiribati
EEZ, Community shipowners will notify the number of ACP
seamen on board. This sum shall be used for training local
seamen and shall be paid into the account specified by the
authorities of the ACP country concerned
Technical measures
Vessels shall comply with the measures and recommendations
adopted by WCPFC in the region regarding fishing gear and the
technical specifications thereof and all other technical measures
applicable to their fishing activities
Observers
Vessels authorised to fish in Kiribati waters under the Agreement
shall take on board observers appointed by the WCPFC….the
WCPFC shall inform the shipowners concerned, or their agents, of
the name of the observer appointed to be taken on board their
vessel at the time the licence is issued, or no later than 15 days
before the observer's planned embarkation date
Within two weeks and giving 10 days' notice, the shipowners
concerned shall make known at which ports in the sub-region and
on what dates they intend to take observers on board
At the end of the observation period and before leaving the vessel,
observers shall draw up an activity report to be transmitted to the
WCPFC, with a copy to the master of the vessel
Compliance
status (yes,
no, partial,
n/a,
unknown)
n/a
Justification, explanation, evidence, and any additional
comments
Basis for evaluation of
compliance status e.g. source
of information
Records of financial payments.
Notifications of seamen provided
by vessels on entry as recorded
by Department of Fisheries.
Yes
May be some non-compliance with WCPFC HS regulation,
but this is outside the control of Kiribati and is a matter from
the EU.
Not always, and notification can be very late preventing
sufficient time to organise visas, flights, etc. for observers to
arrive in Ecuador on time. Observers decided by Kiribati
authorities, and WCPFC not involved. Done through national
observer coordinator. Some vessels have left Ecuador
without observers and get special agreement to pick them up
in Kiribati.
Observer reports, MCS records
of infringements
Partial
WCPFC
owners
communication
to
VI 6.
VI 13.
Unknown
No
Need to improve capacity of Kiribati observer capacity.
PNA have reportedly told observers not to supply report to
master. MFMRD does not allow observers to submit reports
to ships masters for fear that it will compromise their safety.
This requirement is not specified in the FFA Standard
Operating Procedures, which are followed by all Pacific
island countries.
Consultations
Observer reports
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Article,
Chapter,
Section,
Para.
VII 1.
VII 2.
Covenant
Compliance
status (yes,
no, partial,
n/a,
unknown)
Yes
Yes
Justification, explanation, evidence, and any additional
comments
Basis for evaluation of
compliance status e.g. source
of information
VII 3.
Monitoring
The European Community shall keep an up-to-date list of the
vessels to which a fishing licence has been issued under this
Protocol. This list shall be notified to the Kiribati authorities
Community vessels shall notify, at least three hours in advance, the
Kiribati authorities responsible for fisheries inspection of their
intention to enter or leave the Kiribati fishing zone
Control procedures
Once a boarding inspection has been completed, a certificate
shall be issued to the master of the vessel
Communication from EU to
Kiribati
Email,
fax
communication
Kiribati
Never inspected at sea, but don’t get certificate when
inspected on land. This requirement is not specified in the
FFA Standard Operating Procedures, which are followed by
all Pacific island countries. However the FPA is an
international agreement and thus it is an obligation for Kiribati
Consultations
or
other
records in
No
VII 5.
VII 9.
Satellite monitoring
All Community vessels fishing under this Agreement shall be
subject to satellite monitoring
Transshipment
All Community vessels wishing to tranship catches in Kiribati
waters shall do so within Kiribati ports. And the owners of such
vessels must notify the information in accordance with the
Appendix IV to the competent Kiribati authorities at least 48
hours in advance
Yes
Yes
VMS records,
consultations
fleet
owner
Notifications by vessels to
authorities and transshipment
records
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Appendix D: Costs and Earnings models for 84m and 100+m EU purse seine vessels utilising fishing
possibilities provided by the Protocol
Figures in Euros and Tonnes
Operational information
Number of vessels in fleet
Average age of vessels
Average length (m)
Average GT
Vessel and engine cost
Vessel and engine lifespan
Gear cost
Gear lifespan
EU crew
Kiribati crew
Other crew
T otal crew
Fishing days per year
Fishing days in Kiribati
Fishing days in WCP
Fishing days in EPO
Average yearly skipjack catch in Kiribati
Average yearly yellowfin catch in Kirbati
Average yearly bigeye catch in Kirbati
T otal average yearly catch in Kiribati
T otal average yearly catch all areas
Dependency on Kiribati for catch
Average catch per day
Financial information
Sales Revenue
Sales revenue Kiribati zone
-Skipjack
-Yellowfin
-Bigeye
- T otal sales revenue Kiribati zone
- T otal sales revenues all areas
Average price per tonne
Operational costs
Fuel
Crew
Port calls
Yearly fishing related repairs and maintenance
Fishing rights
Other
T otal operational costs
Operational costs/day
Fixed costs
Insurance
Bi-annual major repairs/refit
Vessel depreciation
Gear depreciation
Overhead
T otal fixed costs
T OT AL COST S
Net profit/earnings before interest and tax
Net profit as % of turnover
Cost of fishing rights as % of average price/t
84m vessels
2
1999
73
2,490
24,000,000
20
600,000
5
15
2
10
27
300
73
135
165
1,393
338
255
1,985
8,000
24.8%
27
100+m vessels
2
2000
103.5
3,995
28,000,000
20
600,000
5
15
3
12
30
300
73
135
165
2,519
481
715
3,715
12,000
31.0%
40
931,568
422,720
234,958
1,589,245
6,405,341
801
1,650,000
900,000
250,000
500,000
138,943
150,000
3,588,943
11,963
128,107
500,000
1,200,000
120,000
192,160
2,140,267
5,729,210
-
676,131
11%
4.4%
1,967,167
547,632
647,562
3,162,360
10,216,267
851
2,500,000
1,000,000
375,000
750,000
260,015
150,000
5,035,015
16,783
204,325
750,000
1,400,000
120,000
306,488
2,780,813
7,815,828
2,400,439
23%
4.1%
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Appendix E: Methodology used in this evaluation
The basis for the estimation of the economic and financial impacts of the Protocol presented in this report is as
follows:
Two separate costs and earnings profiles have been developed for the EU purse seine vessels
operating in Kiribati, based on two main vessel classes. One profile has been developed for the two
84m vessels (average 2,490 GT), and one for the 102+m vessels (3,500-4,500 GT). These two types
of vessels may be expected to have different costs/earnings profiles given differing catch rates and
investment costs. No model for has been constructed for longline vessels as none have used the
Protocol (and there is no perceived possible usage under a future Protocol). The costs and earnings
profiles are provided in Appendix D;
Data for each profile is presented to show an average yearly costs and earnings profile for the
Protocol period, with data being an average of 2007-2011 (and using provisional catch data for 2011).
Each profile calculates profit margins;
Each profile first provides some operational information on vessel size, fishing days in Kiribati and
elsewhere (based on SPC data), crew nationalities, the total estimated yearly catch, and the catch in
Kiribati waters based on IEO catch data and therefore dependency on Kiribati;
Sales revenue is then estimated based on fish prices by species (see Table 26 with all yearly prices
adjusted to reflect Free On Board (FOB) prices), to arrive at an average annual turnover, and average
fish price per tonne;
Variable and fixed costs are presented and broken down as far as is possible into different line items,
and are best estimates based on data presented in Miyake
et al.,
(2010) which provides a costs and
earnings profile for French purse seine vessels of around 73 m operating in the Indian Ocean in 2007
(and fishing on free schools of tuna), consultations with OPAGAC, and the balance of costs shown in
Spanish Annual Economic Report (AER) data for the over 40m purse seine fleet. The two profiles
make a number of assumptions with regards to input costs as follows:
o
Fuel price data for French purse seine vessels in the Indian Ocean has been indexed to
changes in gasoil prices over the period 2007-2011, based on average yearly gasoil prices
(which provides an index of 0.97 on 2007 gasoil prices
48
);
o
The 100+m vessels are 21 % larger in length than the 84m vessels, 60 % larger in terms of
GT, and are estimated to catch 50 % more per year/day. Input costs for the 100+m vessels
are therefore scaled up where appropriate from those estimated for the 84m vessels;
o
We acknowledge that approaches to depreciation may vary, but have used an approach
which bases depreciation cost on the lifespan of the capital item (vessel and gear), and an
estimated new build cost at the mid-point of the evaluation period (in this case mid-2009).
However, we also take the view that sources of finance may vary considerably and should not
be included. The profiles thus estimate a net profit per class of vessel, or earnings, before
interest and tax i.e. (EBIT – a commonly-used financial indicator).
48
Gasoil prices dropped in 2009 to 65% of 2007 prices before rising again in 2011 to above prices in 2007.
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The two individual vessels models are then used as the basis for estimating total value-added
resulting from the Protocol based on the total fleet operating in Kiribati waters, and its dependency on
Kiribati relative to fishing in other areas. For each of the variable and fixed cost items, value-added to
the upstream/input sub-sector is estimated. Estimates are made of a) the percentage of the total
value-added derived/generated in both the EU and in Kiribati, and b) the rate of value-added i.e.
labour inputs represent 100 % value-added, while value-added from other physical inputs is sum of
the profit and labour made by suppliers of those inputs. The rates of value-added are acknowledged
as necessarily best estimates only;
Value-added in the catching sub-sector is estimated based on the crew earnings and the net profits
before interest and tax;
Value-added in the downstream processing sector is estimated based on the amount of product
destined for processing in the EU (i.e. the estimated tonnage destined for canneries in Spain/Galicia
after primary processing into loins in Ecuador). The rate of processing sector value-added in estimated
at 25 % based primarily on the Oceanic Developpement
et al.
report of 2005 on the tuna sector (which
reported a commercial margin of 16 % on the cost of fish for the EU tuna processing sector for
skipjack cans from loins, plus an additional 5 % labour costs), and on Spanish Data Collection
Regulation / Data Collection Framework (DCR/DCF) national aggregated data on the processing
sector as a whole for Spain which shows a rate of 35 % gross value-added in 2007, 29 % in 2008 and
32 % in 2009 (provisional data). There is no downstream processing in Kiribati; and
Based on all of the above, the economic model constructed allows for an estimation of the value-
added directly attributable to the Protocol to both the EU and to Kiribati, in the upstream sub-sector, in
the catching sub-sector, and in the processing sub-sector.
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Appendix F: Purse seine catches in the WCPO by nationality, 2006 to 2010 (tonnes)
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
flag_id
Skipjack
Yellowfin Bigeye Skipjack
Yellowfin Bigeye Skipjack
Yellowfin Bigeye Skipjack
Yellowfin Bigeye Skipjack
Yellowfin Bigeye
China
47,776
4,828
140
48,745
5,428
768
43,406
10,960 1,188
67,635
7,073 1,535
42,255
10,513
948
Ecuador
6,152
1,328 2,043
6,222
716 2,249
17,675
2,463 5,277
3,136
505
787
5,846
850 1,755
EU
8,347
690 1,997
15,354
4,322 3,282
25,553
4,789 5,863
19,677
3,070 3,816
20,517
4,040 4,911
FS
Micronesia
9,215
958
159
11,853
1,448
196
15,933
1,899
294
16,784
1,807
545
19,395
2,673
380
Indonesia
154,233
44,253 6,115
138,341
63,524 4,830
144,118
54,375 8,204
161,223
37,205 8,268
179,826
20,670 6,201
Japan
217,566
28,295 4,672
229,220
26,282 5,396
212,417
35,331 5,630
193,051
33,096 3,447
200,011
38,544 2,679
Kiribati
3,367
1,157
139
4,178
1,169
103
3,937
1,570
249
16,721
3,135 1,021
23,153
4,686 3,593
Korea
205,220
43,346 3,224
214,933
41,469 1,775
187,277
59,047 2,478
257,481
23,647 2,140
216,026
58,314 2,972
Marshall Is
38,881
1,436 2,032
53,916
3,370 2,118
26,500
4,151 1,567
39,674
1,532 2,233
47,387
7,028 1,546
New
Zealand
21,662
2,157
860
33,646
2,329
651
26,079
3,200
713
26,667
1,264
204
23,615
765
131
Papua
New
Guinea
184,087
39,224 5,693
181,475
41,042 4,250
146,954
51,039 4,765
160,782
41,976 6,512
149,780
48,174 4,473
Philippines
123,749
51,178 7,358
149,740
51,100 4,282
176,078
63,738 4,136
161,547
43,204 4,356
123,679
39,789 3,722
Solomon
Is
12,333
8,816 1,355
10,164
6,225
918
6,413
9,187
88
9,557
8,133
193
8,207
4,212
546
El
Salvador
3,546
1,307 1,172
8,639
599 1,724
6,023
639 2,162
5,461
707 1,203
Tuvalu
3,991
392
45
8,459
1,996
99
Taiwan
189,392
19,793
987
209,002
21,147 2,386
165,007
35,770 3,196
173,725
16,237 2,113
166,211
29,203 3,437
USA
55,633
8,448 4,364
75,210
10,541 2,985
159,741
45,363 4,220
253,783
21,245 6,561
215,587
25,686 4,251
Vanuatu
55,050
5,982
871
62,631
7,886
764
30,512
7,634
572
35,454
2,035
351
21,031
2,452
237
Grand
Total
1,333,030 261,926 42,314 1,448,543 289,342 38,430 1,396,606 391,152 50,469 1,607,278 246,232 46,594 1,476,813 300,339 43,389
Source: SPC.
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Appendix G: Longline catches in the WCPO by nationality, 2006 to 2010 (tonnes)
flag_id
Australia
Belize
Cook Islands
China
Spain
Fih=ji
FSMicronesia
Indonesia
Japan
Kiribati
Korea
Marshall Is
New
Caledonia
Nauru
Niue
New Zealand
French
Polynesia
Papua New
Guinea
Philippines
Palau
Solomon Is
Tonga
Taiwan
USA
Vanuatu
Western
Samoa
Grand Total
2006
Yellowfin
1,830
106
262
3,997
127
2,231
270
9,482
14,658
9,529
414
42
3
690
2,139
484
Bigeye
499
254
166
9,790
62
771
172
3,011
26,393
12,489
35
22
177
498
216
59
Albacore
2,591
271
2,223
7,191
0
11,802
0
0
24,240
1,050
1,358
213
496
2,918
1,811
0
2007
Yellowfin
1,390
273
290
1,580
127
1,721
548
10,371
15,107
8,817
2
393
30
25
527
1,539
484
Bigeye
1,008
158
238
7,821
62
556
1,395
1,993
27,024
10,054
3
53
18
213
478
111
59
Albacore
1,925
164
2,644
5,453
0
7,145
0
0
25,658
1,433
0
1,324
137
357
3,957
1,598
0
2008
Yellowfin
1,650
129
247
4,562
10
2,763
328
9,564
13,194
7
7,846
91
424
8
11
447
2,259
484
Bigeye
1,027
89
292
8,761
77
671
970
6,704
20,144
44
17,001
375
63
1
133
490
201
59
Albacore
1,277
7
2,224
15,092
66
7,650
0
0
20,960
0
1,481
15
1,506
7
382
3,068
464
0
2009
Yellowfin
1,387
121
197
6,800
7
2,564
583
18,221
14,885
9,312
120
487
20
3
725
2,714
484
Bigeye
726
43
217
11,565
46
689
1,395
4,000
17,149
15,239
381
51
10
253
610
128
59
Albacore
1,523
26
1,551
20,149
70
7,166
40
0
24,550
1,608
10
1,649
147
422
3,865
906
0
2,010
Yellowfin
1,359
279
215
2,356
7
1,875
406
14,041
16,255
7,644
117
505
8
6
398
2,147
484
3,197
47
22,234
931
788
386
75,684
Bigeye
458
89
126
8,895
46
456
899
1,221
12,051
13,914
257
44
4
131
433
39
59
412
24
11,996
4,067
2,060
108
57,789
Albacore
745
10
1,536
16,790
70
4,119
49
0
24,498
1,337
17
1,939
97
456
3,572
883
0
7,966
124
14,795
4,273
12,293
2,529
98,098
227
18,654
1,450
799
264
67,661
117
14,295
4,562
1,651
128
75,370
414
11,027
4,334
8,804
2,113
82,856
341
16,668
1,473
967
305
62,982
129
14,760
5,599
2,122
101
73,957
390
10,918
5,426
8,388
3,113
80,030
291
16,418
1,169
539
317
62,758
81
15,300
4,781
860
106
78,230
220
7,015
3,848
5,582
2,342
73,206
109
17,895
827
514
412
78,387
38
13,338
3,990
1,300
117
71,344
124
11,166
4,063
7,992
2,816
89,843
Source: SPC.
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Appendix H: Purse seine and longline catches in Kiribati EEZ by nationality, 2007 to 2010 (tonnes)
2007
Purse
seine
flag_id
China
Ecuador
EU
FSM
Japan
Kiribati
Korea
Marshall Is
New
Zealand
PNG
El Salvador
Tuvalu
Taiwan
USA
Vanuatu
Grand Total
Longline
flag_id
China
Japan
Kiribati
Korea
Taiwan
Vanuatu
Grand Total
Bigeye
11
1,844
1,240
1
17
24
617
1,111
271
206
236
195
981
224
6,979
Yellowfin
33
683
987
23
150
492
11,451
1,979
865
3,296
391
1,417
3,091
1,395
26,253
2007
Bigeye
26
3,935
508
535
5,045
Skipjack
321
4,616
1,906
83
1,919
620
45,589
25,289
7,474
9,379
1,576
10,303
18,980
9,471
137,528
Bigeye
94
3,915
2,628
26
74
1,176
107
209
389
899
563
1,204
331
11,616
2008
Yellowfin
2,241
1,674
2,260
494
3,594
26,068
2,055
1,281
6,552
325
8,885
17,513
4,303
77,246
2008
Bigeye
12
44
3,304
727
220
4,307
Skipjack
1,186
14,637
12,420
1,299
1,421
38,958
5,145
2,395
12,324
6,593
10,816
26,749
4,929
138,871
Bigeye
18
542
1,447
53
154
170
865
793
48
266
1,360
27
507
2,110
122
8,482
2009
Yellowfin
89
351
1,837
137
542
357
5,902
690
199
2,040
455
181
2,220
5,244
493
20,737
2009
Bigeye
1,063
62
2,400
429
422
4,375
Skipjack
1,800
2,451
9,522
1,455
2,310
2,905
85,925
17,769
6,284
23,772
4,249
2,317
35,332
80,146
14,643
290,879
Bigeye
41
1,620
2,150
28
31
1,971
755
702
35
366
668
3
597
1,303
53
10,325
2010
Yellowfin
138
773
2,286
332
4
1,986
11,486
1,842
234
2,728
447
32
2,891
5,621
232
31,030
2010
Bigeye
1
2,400
1
262
2,707
Skipjack
1,073
3,640
11,281
1,607
20
8,203
41,140
17,039
4,874
16,741
3,152
1,966
23,174
57,797
4,835
196,542
Alabacore
0
186
362
239
787
Yellowfin
21
2,951
170
117
3,264
Alabacore
1
0
124
47
67
239
Yellowfin
2
7
1,654
173
47
1,884
Alabacore
78
10
128
41
342
599
Yellowfin
313
52
1,366
143
78
1,952
Alabacore
0
128
0
404
633
Yellowfin
1
1,366
0
78
1,458
Source: SPC.
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