is this the man to save our Tuna????? Shane Jones has won the first fight with the Cucumber now lets see what he can do about the Tuna....
It's a small victory for a politician used to much bigger tussles:
but Shane Jones has won the first fight of his new job by helping to
save the humble Tongan sea cucumber.
Remember Shane Jones? The fiery Labour politician who quit
Parliament in April to take up a newly-created role roaming the Pacific
as New Zealand's fishing envoy/ambassador to several small nations? The
headlines may have gone, but Jones hasn't been quiet. The Tongans are
now banning the harvesting, processing and exporting of sea cucumbers,
or beche-de-mer, for the next five years. And next up he will wade into
decisions about how the Pacific Islands carve up the $8 billion a year
Pacific tuna stock without decimating it. These debates are the sort in
which Jones could play a vital role, says Glenn Hurry, a senior Pacific
fishing official. "He is quite effective. He's the type of person the
region needs."
With 60 per cent of New Zealand's $600 million a year aid budget
going to the Pacific and around $70 million to fisheries, Jones has some
weight. "I want to be a friendly but firm face," he says. "It's not an
amount to be sneezed at, and it's not unreasonable for us to be firm."
So first came the tasteless sea cucumber, believed by Asians to be good for sexual health, tendinitis and arthritis.
Now tuna. Jones, who once knocked iwi and hapu heads together in the
early days of the Maori Fisheries Commission, has to do the same with
Pacific nations over the lucrative migratory tide of skipjack tuna,
which ranges from Papua New Guinea past French Polynesia and back toward
New Zealand.
"As well as being our ambassador to Mauritius and the Seychelles and
and now high commissioner to the bankrupted Pacific republic of Nauru,
Jones is New Zealand's representative on several fishing agencies that
effectively control the industry in the Pacific. These bodies, he says,
are "a reminder of human nature".
"It is a reminder that when you have rivalry, the only way forward
is to find common ground, or you are condemned to pitting forces against
each other."
Big-eye tuna is down to 20 per cent of its original spawning
biomass, or, thinks Jones, below 16 per cent - in layman's terms,
nearing collapse.
Pacific bluefin is worse while yellowfin is around 37 per cent. Skipjack looks healthy at 50 per cent.
Hurry, who until earlier this year headed the Pacific fishing
commission and before that ran Australia's fisheries agency, says tuna
is a big problem looming".
He wants Jones to become a bigger player.
"A guy with Shane's skills and abilities as an orator might make a difference. He is someone who can open political doors."
Jones faces balancing conservation issues against pressure from
bigger nations and industry on the smaller island countries - some of
whom only make money by selling off their fishing rights - to ignore
ecological issues and chase the dollar.
"There is so much pressure on the Pacific islands that the resource
will disappear in a nanosecond," says Jones, who has to get everyone to
play by the rules.
"The world will not take the Pacific seriously if there is evidence that the resource rules are being broken here."
But he has faith in the fishing industry is not in a race to the bottom.
"Any industry is always going to have outliers, any industry is
going to have shenanigans, whether it is cutting trees, milking cows,
extracting minerals, or harvesting fish.
"There will always be egregious elements.
"The investment in fishing is too vast now to see it "turn to fiscal dust" by wiping out the resource they depend on.
"I don't believe they are dedicated to catching the last fish."
------------- Thanks for everything you did for us Eric. may you rest in peace, You were one of the real legends of NZ recreational fishing
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