Marine conservation target.

OldBlackDog

Well-Known Member
Federal government using fishery closures to count toward promised 5% marine conservation target
06.08.2017
The Liberals campaigned on a promise to protect five per cent of Canada's oceans by 2017, before meeting a 2020 UN commitment of 10 per cent.
Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc
Canada has moved a little closer to meeting its target to protect five per cent of the country’s oceans by the end of 2017, but some are concerned about the methods the government is using to reach that goal.

To coincide with World Oceans Day, Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc announced on Thursday that St. Anns Bank, covering 4,364 square kilometres east of Cape Breton, is officially Canada’s latest marine protected area.

Altogether, Canada is now protecting 1.52 per cent of its oceans — a far cry from the five per cent target it has promised to hit in the next seven months, though LeBlanc said there’s “other good news coming” that will take the country “to five per cent and a bit beyond.”

The new protected area “will help to protect many, many fish, and even turtles,” LeBlanc told a class of sixth-graders at the Museum of Nature in Ottawa during the announcement.

But Fisheries and Oceans Canada made another, more muted announcement this week about a host of other areas that will also count toward the five per cent target, and it’s raising concerns among conservationists.

The government has decided that some fisheries management areas, including some where just a single fishery has been closed, will now count as marine refuges.

Together, the selected areas account for 0.46 per cent of Canada’s oceans — nearly one third of the total area the government has set aside to date.

“I really worry that the government, in trying to reach the numbers, is playing a quantity over quality game,” said Sabine Jessen, national ocean program director with the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society.

For instance, the list of new areas includes fragile glass sponge reefs in B.C.’s Strait of Georgia, where bottom fishing was prohibited in 2015.

But Jessen said there’s nothing preventing people from laying cables or dropping anchors into those areas, which means they’re not fully protected.

“Those are things you can’t actually address using a fishing closure.”

In some of the areas in eastern Canada, only lobster fishing or scallop dragging has been banned.

The issue comes down to wording in an international UN commitment to protect 10 per cent of coastal and marine areas by 2020, which Canada agreed to in 2010.

The agreement states that the 10 per cent must be conserved through protected areas or “other effective area-based conservation measures.”

But Jessen said the international community is still working to define what those other measures can be, and Canada is acting on its own.

The Liberals campaigned on a promise to protect five per cent of Canada’s oceans by 2017, before meeting the 2020 target. The looming deadline put pressure on the government to define “other measures” very broadly, Jessen said.

“They don’t have enough marine protected areas in the pipeline that will be finished by (the end of the year), so they decided that coming up with their own definition… would be a way for them to find other areas.”

Canada does have other marine protected areas in the works, including 12,000 square kilometres of the Laurentian Channel in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, which would be the largest in the country.

But concerns have been raised there, too, as the area would remain open to oil and gas activity and shipping.

Jessen said research has shown that protected areas where some activity still occurs look no different from the rest of the ocean. If the government isn’t going to set aside areas that are fully protected, she said, “Why go to all that trouble?”

Still, LeBlanc said it’s not unreasonable to allow certain activities in areas that are otherwise protected.

“Having somebody in a small boat with a fishing line… catching a tuna that doesn’t go anywhere near the bottom… doesn’t have a negative effect on the conservation,” he told reporters Thursday.

World Oceans Day this year comes in the wake of a recent warning from UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres that the world’s oceans could contain more plastic than fish by weight in 2050.

On Thursday, LeBlanc told the sixth-graders the thought of all that plastic “grossed (him) out.”

• Email: mforrest@postmedia.com | Twitter: MauraForrest
 
I would strongly advise you to be very concerned about this .
 
Rumour has it that several areas in Johnstone Straits, Queen Charlotte Sound, Cape Caution and Scott Islands areas will be closed. Its any ones guess about other areas off the west coast.... the community consultations about these areas has been weak at best.......
 
Coming to the west coast, soon.


Consultation process questioned for waters off Cape Breton designated as Marine Protected Area

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This map shows the newly created Marine Protected Area (MPA) just off eastern Cape Breton.

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SYDNEY, N.S. — An area three quarters the size of Prince Edward Island has been declared as a Marine Protected Area (MPA) just off eastern Cape Breton and the people who normally fish there aren’t too pleased about it.

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7According to Veronika Brzeski, executive director of the Cape Breton Fish Harvesters Association, local fishermen will be losing 15 per cent of their total fishing area. But what’s even worse was the way the Department of Fisheries and Ocean went about setting it up, she says.

“I think we are more upset by the process,” says Brzeski. “It was not done the way it should have been done. It should have been done more respectfully.”

Fisheries and Oceans Minister Dominic LeBlanc announced the establishment of the St. Ann’s Bank Marine Protected Area as part of World Oceans Day earlier this week. The designation means that most human activities such as commercial fishing will be prohibited in 75 per cent of the area.

“St. Anns Bank is the third Marine Protected Area to be designated in Canadian waters in less than eight months,” said LeBlanc.

“Our government’s accomplishments in marine conservation come thanks to close collaboration with all levels of government, local communities, Indigenous communities, industry, and environmental non-governmental organizations. Our government is working toward conservation while contributing to the social and economic sustainability of coastal communities.”

While the minister spoke of “close collaboration” between the government and other groups, Brzeski says her group is disappointed that the government went ahead and designated the area without proper consultation with the people who actually work and fish in the area. She says they were originally informed about the matter about a year and a half ago, out of the blue. Subsequent meetings were held in Halifax and the final decisions were made in Ottawa about a matter that affects Cape Breton fishers.

“We were in utter shock,” she says. “We were not expecting it.

“If you were consulting with an industry, they would be prepared for what was coming. Nobody in our industry was.”

The designated area includes an important halibut fishing area, and it will affect the harpoon sword and tuna fisheries as well. There’s also a possibility that more fishing grounds will also be lost if more areas are also designated MPAs in the future.

While Brzeski says they can’t get back the grounds that fall under this particular MPA, her group wants to ensure that any future fishery decisions are based on proper consultation and engagement with the people it most affects.

“You have to remember that it is 15 per cent of our fishing ground,” says Brzeski. “The next move is to ensure that DFO has learnt how poorly they have consulted with the local industry — most of the meetings concerning this area were held in Halifax and decisions were made in Ottawa.

“They really need a community-based approach.”

The MPA in question will conserve and protect many ecologically and biologically significant features, including important habitats, areas of high biodiversity and biological productivity, and endangered and threatened marine species, including the leatherback turtle. It includes Scatarie Bank, most of St. Anns Bank and part of the western edge of the Laurentian Slope and Channel.

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DFO will talk to Nova Scotia about growing number of marine protected areas
Province is concerned more marine protected areas will have a negative impact on Nova Scotia's economy
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Nova Scotia has asked the federal government to stop setting aside new marine-protected areas off the province until other coastal regions have met their levels. (CBC)
The Department of Fisheries and Oceans will meet with the province to discuss its concerns about the growing numbers of marine protected areas being designated off Nova Scotia, a department spokesman says.

In April, the province asked Ottawa to stop making additional designationsuntil other provinces and territories reach the same numbers achieved off Nova Scotia.

The McNeil government is concerned the creation of more marine protected areas will have a negative impact on Nova Scotia's economy. Marine-protected designations restrict human activities like fishing and offshore energy development.

Vance Chow, a DFO spokesperson, said in an email that Fisheries and Oceans Minister Dominic Leblanc "welcomes the input from his provincial colleagues." The email said the minister is looking forward to Canadian Council of Fisheries and Aquaculture Ministers meetings this week in Whitehorse where he will meet with his provincial and territorial counterparts.

It's the first time DFO has publicly acknowledged or responded to Nova Scotia's concerns.

The department says it has identified dozens of potential areas for protection in coastal and ocean waters off Nova Scotia.

"The large number of sites would refer to marine areas that DFO has identified, through science, that may be of interest for future protection," Chow wrote.

"These areas have been identified as part of the early stages of MPA network development. These areas are then subject to consultation and more work to determine what, if any, marine protection may be required."

DFO has held seven public meetings in Nova Scotia to discuss its plan to protect five per cent of Canada's oceans by the end of 2017 and 10 per cent by 2020.
 
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