Australian Fisheries and Aquaculture Statistics 2019-2020
Southern Ocean IPA - Bottom Fishing Impact Assessment (BFIA) for proposed fishing activities by Australia in the Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement (SIOFA) Area – 2020 Update
Australian Fisheries and Aquaculture Statistics 2018
Australian Fisheries and Aquaculture Statistics 2017
Australian Fisheries and Aquaculture Statistics 2016
Statistics on Australian fisheries production and trade provides a source of information for a range of
purposes. The information can be used to meet the needs of the fishing and aquaculture industry, fisheries
managers, policymakers and researchers. It can assist in policy decisions, industry marketing strategies and
the allocation of research funding or priorities. The gross value of production for specific fisheries are used for
determining the research and development levies collected by government. The neutrality and integrity of
GVP estimates is therefore important due to their forming the basis for research levies for each fishery. At the
international level, the Department of Agriculture through Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource
Economics and Sciences (ABARES) contributes to a number of international databases. These include
databases managed by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD). Information at the international level can assist in international
negotiations on issues such as transboundary fisheries and analysis of trade opportunities.
Final report
Project products
Technical Review for the Commonwealth Policy on Fisheries Bycatch: risk-based approaches, reference points and decisions rules for bycatch and byproduct species
In the past few years, the fishing sector has come under intense scrutiny for the poor management of bycatch, especially threatened, endangered and protected species, and incidentally caught shark species. It has been ten years since the development of the commonwealth and national bycatch policies and circumstances and issues relating to bycatch management have changed considerably from a domestic and international perspective.
Outputs/outcomes from a review of existing Australian bycatch policies will assist in delivering the following:
- streamlining current approaches for the management of bycatch and threatened, endangered and protected species, to reduce regulatory and financial burden to fishers and fisheries managers while increasing the effectiveness of minimising bycatch;
- increase the confidence of consumers that the management of Australian fisheries and production of seafood can be sustainable;
- further advancing claims that Australia has sustainably managed fisheries that link with domestic and international legislative and policy objectives.
Final report
Tactical Research Fund: Indigenous turtle and dugong conservation comic
This is project will develop a “Indigenous Turtle and Dugong Conservation Comic” project for the Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry that increases the understanding of Indigenous dugong and turtle fishermen about species sustainability and the population impacts if extraction continues at current levels.
The Torres Strait region is characterised by a complex marine ecosystem, which supports globally significant populations of dugong and marine turtles. Torres Strait is the most important dugong habitat in the world and the region has six of the seven species of marine turtles.
Within Torres Strait there are nineteen Indigenous communities distributed across seventeen geographically remote islands stretching to the south-western coast of Papua New Guinea and the northern tip of Cape York Peninsula. These communities are very diverse in terms of their socio-economic, cultural and political characteristics. Each community also has differing priorites, needs and concerns in relation to local issues affecting turtle and dugong.
Story telling is the basis for Indigenous communication. Families prefer messages as stories because they resonate with people's day to day experience and have been the cornerstone of passing on culture and values. Many organisations now understand the value of this form of communication. This project, to develop a series of educational comic books in collaboration with Island youth, is needed to develop grassroots knowledge of conservation and fisheries management, and committment to sustainable practices for harvest of dugong and turtle.
This knowledge and committment is necessary to ensure young Indigenosu school students understand the environemental impacts of traditional harvest of marine turtle and duging, and in turn to ensure the sustainability of traditional hunting practice.
Final report
Tactical Research Fund: Torres Strait Tropical Rock Lobster fishery 5 year business plan
The Commonwealth and Queensland governments, have to date spent $10.7 million restructuring the Tropical Rock Lobster fishery. As part of this restructure, the Indigenous commercial sector now holds 53 per cent of the Australian component of the fishery. A business plan investigating how to develop the fishery in the medium term should be created as it will assist in identifying and developing capacity building initiatives that build upon the restructure that has already occurred in the fishery. This plan will greatly enhance the economic and social utility of the fishery and in particular will be of benefit to the Indigenous commercial sector.
This plan will also explore how each sector’s desires can be met in an innovative and co-operative approach, as well as incorporating additional factors such as
• the optimum utilization of resources;
• product development;
• market access opportunities and
• the sustainability of the fishery.
As part of exploring the sustainability of the fishery, consideration for the introduction of the new management plan for the fishery will need to be incorporated into discussions.
Current negotiations as part of introducing the management plan for the fishery have stalled due to the non-Indigenous commercial and Indigenous commercial sector’s positions being inconsistent with each other. Both sectors have agreed to continue negotiations as part of developing this medium term business plan.
Outcomes from this strategic plan will be used to assist in gaining consensus amongst the sectors to the introduction of the management plan and assist in broader strategic policy planning and business development in the TSPZ for the benefit of the non-Indigenous commercial and Indigenous commercial sectors of the fishery.