WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush called for a halt to destructive
fishing on the high seas Tuesday and said the United States will work to
eliminate or better regulate practices such as bottom trawling that
devastate fish populations and the ocean floor.
Bush directed the State and Commerce departments to promote
"sustainable" fisheries and to oppose any fishing practices that destroy
the long-term natural productivity of fish stocks or habitats such as
seamounts, corals and sponge fields for short-term gain.
He said the U.S. would work with other nations and international
groups to change fishing practices and create international fishery
regulatory groups if needed.
The memo was issued a day before United Nations negotiations open in
New York on an effort to ban bottom fishing anywhere it's unregulated.
While Brazil, Chile, Germany, the Netherlands, South Africa and, now,
the U.S. have expressed support for regulating bottom trawling on the
high seas, Spain, Russia and Iceland are among those that oppose it.
The U.S. allows but regulates bottom fishing in U.S. waters. The
practice involves boats dragging huge nets along the sea floor scooping
up orange roughy, blue ling and other fish while bulldozing nearly
everything else in their path.
"It's like clear-cutting the forest to catch a squirrel," said Joshua
Reichert, head of the private Pew Charitable Trusts' environment
program, which has been leading an international coalition of more than
60 conservation groups against the practice.
"The White House ... has once again come out strongly in support of
ocean conservation, proving that there is bipartisan support for ending
the destruction of the worlds oceans," Reichert said.
Bush created a national monument in June to protect the Northwestern
Hawaiian Islands and surrounding waters, an archipelago 1,400 miles long
and 100 miles wide in the Pacific Ocean.
His position on high-seas fishing represents a last-minute shift
going into an election, in part due to mounting pressure from the
conservation groups, key Republican senators such as Ted Stevens of
Alaska, Richard Lugar of Indiana and John Warner of Virginia, and U.S.
allies such as Britain, Norway, Australia and New Zealand.
A State Department document prepared in recent months for the eyes of
foreign diplomats only had suggested that nations impose a ban on bottom
trawling by 2009 — but provided an easy out for any nation whose fleets
want to continue using the gear.
The U.S. negotiating "non-paper," a copy of which was obtained by The
Associated Press, unofficially proposed a ban on bottom trawling unless
any nation "determines that its continuation in an area would not cause
significant adverse harm."
The high seas — which extend beyond nations' 200-mile offshore
exclusive economic zones — cover nearly two-thirds of the planet, yet
only about 25 percent of it is subject to international treaties.
Stevens and Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, tried to get the Senate to
toughen up the U.S. stance, but they couldn't muster sufficient support
for it last week. Along with conservation groups, they want the U.N. to
create regional fisheries management organizations to impose
restrictions in the Pacific, Indian and Central Atlantic and Southwest
Atlantic oceans.
"The United Nations must put an end to unregulated fishing
practices on the high seas and call on nations to stop their vessels
from conducting illegal, unreported, and unregulated high-seas bottom
trawling, until measures to regulate this practice are adopted," Stevens
said Tuesday.
Reichert and groups such as Greenpeace, Conservation International
and the Natural Resources Defense Council have waged a two-year global
campaign costing an estimated $5 million lobbying for action by the U.N.
this fall.
"We're not saying no bottom trawling ever. We're saying unregulated
bottom trawling ought not to occur," said Lisa Speer, a New York-based
senior policy analyst at NRDC.
The National Academy of Sciences said in a 2002 report that bottom
trawling can wipe creatures and seafloor habitats, particularly
gravelly, muddy spots. "Many experimental studies have documented the
acute, gear-specific effects of trawling and dredging on various types
of habitat," it said.
The report recommended doing less such fishing, changing the gear and
closing off some areas to fishing.
The fishing industry fears a "potential spillover effect" of any
high-seas ban into U.S. waters, said Stacey Viera, a spokeswoman for the
National Fisheries Institute, representing the $29 billion-a-year
seafood industry.
"If we call bottom trawling an activity that should not be done in
the high seas, then why would it be done anywhere else? That's the
concern here," she said. "Don't demonize one type of fishing gear."
Viera said the industry would support limited closures in places
where the United States worked closely with other nations to identify
sensitive marine ecosystems.
That would be impossible, said marine biologist Sylvia Earle, who
recently helped persuade Bush to protect the Northwestern Hawaiian
Islands. Earle, an explorer-in-residence at the National Geographic
Society, said bottom trawling is unquestionably destructive, like
"bulldozers that go in the sea."