U.S. water usage plan exposed

From: Tri-Parish Times.com

By MIKE NIXON

Approximately 160 members of the South Central Industrial Association were told last Tuesday of White House plans that if fully implemented could seriously hamper commercial and recreational use of the Gulf of Mexico and waterways feeding into it.

Jack Belcher, managing director for the National Ocean Policy Coalition, offered a power point presentation that outlined and documented efforts by the Obama administration to place restrictions and zoning ordinances on all offshore activity. A measure that Belcher claimed would basically be a moratorium on usage of natural resources.

Belcher introduced those in attendance to Executive Order 13547, through which President Barack Obama has established a national ocean policy and adopted an ocean zoning scheme referred to as Coastal Marine Special Planning.

Under a task force ordered by the White House, a 27-member National Ocean Council is being put in place to oversee policy implementation and become ultimate arbiters when dealing with disputes between federal interests and regional concerns.

The NOC is also being developed to enforce national policies and priorities compliance with federally mandated plans.

Study Shows Importance of Environmental Activists

Editor’s Note, the following is from CRE Brazil

Research from the University of Washington concluded that better-managed fishing areas are those that have meetings between local community representatives and fishermen. Where there is only government interaction, the results were worse.

Researchers monitored 130 regions in 44 countries using parameters like fishing species, fishing equipment used, the regulatory system, and earnings obtained and distributed among the fishing community.

One of the highlights was fishing for abalone (sea snails) in Chile, which was launched as a trial basis in 1988 and covered 400 kilometers of the coast. Today, the area covers 4,000 kilometers of the coast and brings together 20,000 artisanal fishermen.

Managing maritime economies

European Commissioner for Fisheries and Maritime Affairs, Maria Damanaki, tells Public Service Review about the conflicts and complements of maritime and financial environments

Since I took up my post as Commissioner for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries at the beginning of 2010, fisheries news has been somewhat overshadowed by the wider economic crisis.

And indeed, that crisis has only compounded the underlying contradictions which the fishing industry has been facing for a long time, without tackling them head on. It is my hope that the current climate, while difficult for some of our fleets, will help focus all our minds and wills on the need to make fundamental changes in the way we manage our fisheries.

It is the continuing short-term bias in our decision-making that creates so many conflicts between economic interests and ecological logic. If the EU fishing industry is to have a viable future, we need to get the environment and the economy working together, not against one another. The next reform of the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) is our best – and maybe our last – chance to fix this problem.

Fishermen voice concerns about impact of offshore wind farms

From:  SouthCoastToday.com

By DON CUDDY
February 01, 2011 12:00 AM
 
NEW BEDFORD — Calling offshore wind turbines “the new frontier for renewable energy,” Daniel Cohen, head of an offshore wind company owned by fishermen, spoke to a small but lively crowd at the New Bedford Whaling Museum Monday.
 
Cohen is president of Fishermen’s Energy, made up of principals in several other New Jersey-based fishing companies who want a stake in how and where wind turbines are sited, he said.
  
“Offshore wind is happening,” said Cohen, who is also CEO of Atlantic Capes Fisheries, a New Jersey company that operates more than 20 fishing vessels.
  
Eight companies are currently proposing projects off Maryland, he said, and his company is one of the eight. “If we didn’t exist, seven of them would still be there,” he said.
  
But some of the fishermen in attendance Monday predicted further ruin for the industry if such projects become a reality.
  
“This is another flank we’re being attacked on,” Rhode Island fisherman Dick Grachek said. “We have been kept out of those areas because it’s a sensitive yellowtail spawning ground.”
  
Last December, the Obama administration announced its intention to encourage the development of wind energy in federal waters off the Massachusetts coast by offering leases to interested parties, with proposals due by Feb. 28.
  
“The import of this is that it will facilitate a faster time line for permitting in areas they consider appropriate for development,” Cohen said. The area proposed locally covers a 3,000-square-mile expanse of federal waters and includes sensitive fish habitat area and lucrative fishing grounds.
  
Turbines would be located a half-mile apart and, to prevent scouring by ocean currents, the base would be surrounded by a circle of large stones, 200 feet in diameter. In addition, a network of ground cables transmitting electricity would further hamper fishing operations, opponents maintain.
  
“The government is looking at marine spatial planning as a cash cow — nothing more, nothing less,” fisherman Joel Hovanesian of Rhode Island said. Apart from taxes, leases granted by the U.S. Department of Interior’s Bureau of Offshore Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement (formerly the Minerals Management Service) have become the principal revenue stream for the federal government, he said.
  
“I’m opposed to this because it won’t work,” said Ed Barrett, president of the Massachusetts Fishermen’s Partnership. “Not one shore-side facility will come offline from any of these projects.”
  
Asked whether he knew of any areas of the world where offshore turbines and commercial fishermen have successfully coexisted, Cohen said he could not say. “The data from Europe is not very good,” he said.