Illex argentinus. (Photo: pasqualinonet)
Illex fishing season begins
FALKLAND ISLANDS
Monday, February 15, 2016, 23:20 (GMT + 9)
The 2016 Illex squid season in the Falkland Islands’ waters opened on Sunday, with a total 105 fishing licenses issued by the local government, a number that has remained consistent over the past three seasons.
The Loligo squid fishing season is scheduled to begin on 24 February, with 16 vessels expected to participate in the fishery.
The Falkland Islands Government Fisheries Department has been regulating and issuing licenses to foreign and locally registered companies to fish in Falkland’s waters since 1987 with the establishment of fishing zones around the Islands.
Squid usually accounts for approximately 75 per cent of the annual catches made in the Falkland’s waters, and the 2015 season ended with a record Illex catch of 358,000 tonnes, said the Director of Natural Resources, John Barton.
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Barton said that the 2015 season was a record for Illex squid with a total of 358,000 tons caught. (Photo: Mercopress) |
The 2016 fishing season will see the introduction of new and stricter safety measures for those involved in the fisheries industry. In early December 2015, the Executive Council agreed on new measures which would be enforceable license conditions for any boats wishing to purchase a license to fish in Falkland’s waters.
Vessels have always had to adhere to safety regulations and inspections when applying for a license, but now stricter measures have been put in place, with no compromises made on issues relating to crew safety onboard, such as the quantity and quality of life jackets and rafts.
In a statement made in December 2015, Barton explained that in most cases vessels operated to acceptable standards, but the safety measures being implemented this year are designed to catch those falling short and are hoped will limit the likelihood of any incidents which have occurred during previous seasons. In past years, some crew members of Illex fishing vessels have jumped overboard when arriving in Stanley harbour. While some have survived, others have not been so lucky.
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Jiggers in Stanley Harbour undergoing inspections before Illex season opens. (Photo: Mercopress) |
New posters have been designed - in multiple languages including Korean, Japanese, Taiwanese - which will be displayed onboard the squid vessels, informing the crew of the dangers of jumping overboard. The posters form part a wider campaign undertaken by the Fisheries Department since 2015 which aims to improve the conditions on some vessels and reduce the possibility of future incidents occurring.
Speaking at the Executive Council in January 2016, MLA Phyl Rendell stated that the Fisheries Department had “been in touch with the vessel owners, their companies, the agents and through the Embassies” to ensure suitable conditions are being met on all vessels and improvements are being made where necessary. She went on to add that any crew members wishing to leave vessels in the future should be allowed to do so “by contacting their senior officers and leaving by launch”.
She also reiterated the need of a “coordinated scientific approach to the management of the fishery in the South-West Atlantic”, and expressed her hope that with the new Argentine government now in place, the exchange on scientific data on fisheries could again be considered by Argentina.
A South Atlantic Fisheries Commission (SAFC) had been established in the early 1990s to ensure cooperative management of fisheries resources between the Falklands and Argentina, but has not met since 2005.
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A chart of jiggers approaching Stanley to collect their licenses. (Image: Mercopress) |
Source: Mercopress
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