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FY 2010 US BUDGET | NOAA AA


Professor Rashid Sumaila's study, "Fish Economics:The Benefits of Rebuilding U.S. Ocean Fish Populations," is cited in the 2010 version of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Budget Blue Book. This document uses Sumaila’s work to support the conclusion that “implementing fishery rebuilding plans will likely result in increased net economic benefits for U.S. stocks that are currently overfished.” Details are on pages 200 & 222 of the NOAA budget report. For more information, visit the Fisheries Economic Research Unit website.



 


SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN | MAY 11, 2009

Daniel Pauly: Fishing for a Perfect Ocean
A 2003 SciAm 50 finalist researches tools to help mend the ocean's broken ecosystem



MEDIA RELEASE | JANUARY 15, 2009

UBC researcher from the Sea Around Us Project gives first-ever estimate of worldwide fish biomass and impact on climate change.

Link to the published study in Science. Link to the associated 'perspective' article.

Video animation of fish excreting pellets of calcium carbonate, a chalk-like substance also known as “gut rocks,” in a process completely separate from food digestion. (animation by Dalai Felinto)




MEDIA RELEASE | SEPTEMBER 17, 2008

Dr Daniel Pauly wins Ramon Margelef Prize in Ecology

Press release

The 2008 Ramon Margalef Prize in Ecology will be given to UBC’s Prof. Daniel Pauly in a ceremony presided by President Montilla, Generalitat of Catalonia at theWorld Congress for Nature in Barcelona on October 6th.

The Ramon Margalef Prize recognizes the career or discovery in the field of ecology contributing to the sustainable management of natural resources.

Pauly was chosen among 17 candidates for his contributions to research and awareness of the global impacts of fisheries on marine ecosystems.




MEDIA RELEASE | AUGUST 25, 2008

“Best hope at sustainable fisheries” shortchanged by conservation efforts: UBC researchers

Image comparing and contrasting large and small-scale fisheries

Link to the published study in Conservation Biology

Video of study co-author Jennifer Jacquet discussing the relationship between small-scale fisheries and fisheries subsidies





MEDIA RELEASE | JULY 15, 2008

Fuel Subsidies Better Spent Re-training Fishers

Skyrocketing fuel costs could lead to long-term sustainable fisheries if governments redirect fuel subsidies currently given to fishing fleets and use them to invest in re-training for fishers, says University of British Columbia fisheries economist Rashid Sumaila.

Dramatic fuel price increases over the past weeks have sparked large-scale protests by fishers around the world. In France, fishers set up blockades at several ports while Japanese squid fishing boats halted operations for two days. Similar events have taken place in Australia, Nigeria and the Philippines.

“The overwhelming demand from the fishing industry is for governments to increase fuel subsidies to offset higher fuel costs, which constitute up to 60 per cent of the cost of fishing,” says Sumaila, director of the Fisheries Economics Unit at the UBC Fisheries Centre and a Pew Fellow in Marine Conservation. “But that would simply dig a deeper hole both economically and environmentally.”

In the first study of its kind, Sumaila has been tracking the economic impact of government fuel subsidies since 2002. He has found that governments around the world spend $6.4 billion annually on fuel subsidies for fishing fleets, 80 per cent of which are handed out by governments in developed countries.

The European Commission announced last week it aimed to release up to 600 million euros (US$940 million) in aid to EU fishers to help them cope with soaring fuel prices.

“Many of these operations would not be economically viable if not for these subsidies,” says Sumaila.

Latest findings of the study, titled Fuel price increase, subsidies, overcapacity, and resource sustainability, will be published in the September issue of ICES Journal of Marine Science. Advance details were released online in April.

“More and more fish populations around the world are being depleted, and we are approaching the point of no return,” said fisheries biologist Dr. Ellen Pikitch, Executive Director of the Pew Institute for Ocean Science, which administers the Pew Fellows program. “Governments can immediately reduce the pressure on dwindling stocks by cutting fuel subsidies and adopting smarter fisheries management plans that protect the fishes’ environment from being ravaged.”

Sumaila’s team is also helping identify long-term solutions for beleaguered global fisheries. A recent survey of fishers in Hong Kong by his graduate students Louise Teh and William Cheung found up to 75 per cent of those interviewed were willing to depart from their “way of life” if given appropriate compensation and re-training.

“More than half of the employers in the marine recreation sector we interviewed indicated they’d be willing to hire fishers,” says Teh. The study was published recently in the International Journal of Social Economics.

“Taxpayers’ money would be better spent helping fishers establish other long term sources of income,” Sumaila adds. “This will solve pressing issues in the fishing industry and ease the pressure on global fish stocks.”




 
Fishereis CentrePew Charitable TrustUBC