Trends in IUU Fishing in the Shared Arafura and Timor Seas

Date

2017

Authors

Edyvane, Karen (Bonba)

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Abstract

The 'semi-enclosed' Arafura and Timor Seas (ATS), particularly the Arafura Sea, is a recognised global hotspot for illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU fishing). IUU fishing remains a major trans-boundary threat to the fisheries, food security and globally significant biodiversity in the ATS, particularly for impoverished and food-insecure coastal communities in Indonesia and Timor-Leste. In the ATS, the annual economic impact of IUU fishing has been recently estimated at >US$1.2B per year for Indonesia and US$214M for Timor-Leste. In this seminar, we examine the history, status and current trends in IUU fishing activity and management within the ATS, particularly in the waters of the Australian Exclusive Economic Zone (AEEZ) and the Indonesian Exclusive Economic Zone (IEEZ). Including recent sharp increases in industrial foreign-flagged trawl fishing (illegal, legal) and Indonesian small-scale fisheries (particularly those targeting shark) in the Arafura Sea and also, increases in foreign fishing vessels FFVs (legal, illegal) sightings in northern Australian waters. While Indonesia (with the support of Australia) has made significant progress in tackling IUU in the Arafura Sea (particularly since 2015, under Minister Susi Pudjiastuti) - there have been major increases in IUU fishing in the Timor Sea, particularly in the waters of Timor-Leste. Including large-scale, industrial foreign trawling operations, which have shifted their Arafura Sea operations to Timor-Leste, following Indonesian bans for illegal fishing. IUU and overfishing in the ATS is linked to a broader pattern of poverty and overfishing of coastal fisheries in the Asia-Pacific, and particularly the southward expansion of IUU foreign trawl fisheries. Strengthening of regional fisheries management in the ATS, particularly under the Regional Plan of Action to Promote Responsible Fishing Practices Including Combating IUU (RPOA-IUU) is urgently required to ensure IUU fishing is tackled, rather than displaced in the ATS - particularly to Timor-Leste, which currently has the least capacity for IUU regulation, enforcement and operational management. Controlling overfishing and IUU fishing activity in the ATS urgently requires a regional, multi-sectoral response, supporting fishing capacity reduction, framed within the context of regional food security and rural economic development.

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Sound recording
Public Lecture

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Open Access via publisher website

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