FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE February 2, 2009
CONTACT: Ted Venker,
1-800-201-FISH
Short-term gain,
long-term loss
Gulf Council tackles longlines, but fumbles future
of grouper fishery.
The Gulf of Mexico
Fishery Management Council engaged in buffet-style fisheries
management at its latest meeting in Mississippi, picking and
choosing data to plot a dubious course of action for the Gulf
grouper fishery.
Faced with evidence
that longline gear used in the grouper fishery is causing an
unacceptable number of sea turtle deaths, the Council opted to pass
an emergency rule prohibiting the destructive gear in water depths
less than 50 fathoms. However, the Council opted to ignore equally
compelling economic data over the value of grouper as a 100 percent
recreational fishery and skirted questions about the impact of the
new emergency rule on the future of the commercial grouper fishery.
Instead, the Council proceeded with an Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ)
program that may well permanently lock a significant portion of the
fishery into the commercial sector.
“This is a classic
case of tunnel vision. The Council was so locked in on implementing
an IFQ program that it couldn’t even acknowledge anything that might
contradict it,” said Dr. Russell Nelson, Gulf fisheries consultant
for Coastal Conservation Association (CCA). “At the very
least the Council should have delayed action on the IFQ program
until this new information was properly evaluated.”
CCA recently
released an economic study by Gentner Consulting Group which revealed
that the maximum economic value of the Gulf grouper fishery to our
nation as a whole would be achieved by allocating 100 percent of the
fishery to the recreational sector. Brad Gentner, author of the
study, ran the recreational economics data collection program for
the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) for eight years before
starting his own company. As a NMFS Economist in the Division of
Economics and Social Analysis, Gentner specialized in survey design,
recreational fisheries demand and welfare analysis, non-market
valuation, and economic impact modeling for recreational fisheries.
“That economic study
raises some very serious questions about the wisdom of proceeding
with a management program that gives a sizeable percentage of the
grouper fishery to a very few commercial fishers, possibly forever,”
said Patrick Murray, CCA vice president. “At the same time, no one
can even predict what the commercial grouper fishery will look like
in a few months as a result of an emergency rule prohibiting their
primary fishing gear in their prime fishing areas. The foundation of
this entire IFQ program is on very shaky ground, yet the Council
chose to forge ahead. It doesn’t make any sense.”
The economic study,
Allocation of the Gulf of Mexico Gag and Red Grouper Fisheries, may
be viewed on the CCA web site,
www.JoinCCA.org/Grouper_Economics_2009.pdf.
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