17 results
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2017-090
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Seafood Directions 2017

In May 2016, The Association Specialists were contracted to manage the biannual National Seafood Industry Conference, Seafood Directions, at the International Convention Centre Sydney. The event included the following: The conference was held across three days (Wednesday 27 September...
ORGANISATION:
Sydney Fish Market Pty Ltd
Blank
Blank
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2012-758
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Seafood CRC: increase sustainable use of crab fisheries resources by recovering revenue from crabs currently rejected at market

Financial losses on the live mud and spanner crab supply chain into Sydney Fish Market are significant. An analysis of data from the 2010/11 financial year demonstrated that: Mud crabs that were downgraded due to being slow represented 2.8% (around 11 tonne) of product supplied worth $71,238...
ORGANISATION:
Sydney Fish Market Pty Ltd
Industry
PROJECT NUMBER • 2012-746
PROJECT STATUS:
COMPLETED

Seafood CRC: preliminary investigation of internationally recognised Responsible Fisheries Management Certification

The FAO Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries and FAO Guidelines for the Eco-labelling of Fish and Fishery Products from Marine Capture Fisheries represent internationally negotiated documents that represent consensus on the criteria for responsibly managed fisheries. These ‘tools’ form the...
ORGANISATION:
Sydney Fish Market Pty Ltd
Blank
Blank

An evaluation of the Beeton review on Marine Protected Areas (MPAs)

Project number: 2010-226.20
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $26,000.00
Principal Investigator: Robert Kearney
Organisation: Sydney Fish Market Pty Ltd
Project start/end date: 11 Oct 2012 - 18 Jan 2013
Contact:
FRDC

Need

This research is necessary to address many priorities under FRDC strategic RD&E themes. The project will: “provide information to the community to demonstrate improvements in the fishing industry’s environmental performance” (Theme 2. Habitat and ecosystem protection) and “incorporate understandings of the cumulative impacts of fishing into fisheries management plans” (Theme 4. Ecologically sustainable development) via detailed and careful evaluation of the potential and real threats of fishing to the marine environment. In addition, ’user-friendly’ versions of the publications will “better inform the community’s perceptions of the industry and to increase support for the industry”. The possibilities for better presenting Australia’s credentials as responsible fisheries managers will be enhanced.

One of the goals of AFMA as outlined in their Corporate Plan 2010-2014 is to improve the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of fisheries administration (this concept is echoed in all Australian states and territories but the actual wording differs). The research proposed here will provide an evaluation of the degree to which fishing does actually represent a threat to marine biodiversity and the cost-effectiveness of traditional fisheries management for ameliorating that threat(s) compared as far as possible with the threats to biodiversity and fisheries from other sources. This will be vital to clarifying the current confusion between fisheries management and biodiversity conservation. These assessments are critical to improving fisheries management strategies and making them more cost-effective and proportionate to environmental problems (a requirement of the Intergovernmental Agreement on the Environment). In light of national commitments to establish a comprehensive system of representative marine protected areas by 2012, peer-reviewed publications will prove an invaluable and urgently needed tool to defend the credentials of the Australian fishing industry and to more appropriately position fishing interests in the decision making process.

Ref:
AFMA (2010). Corporate Plan 2010-2014. Australian Fisheries Management Authority, Canberra

Objectives

1. Investigate cases of real threats from fishing to fish stocks and/or biodiversity more generally in Australian waters, and alternative management strategies for sustainable fishing and the recovery of populations and areas that have been previously overfished.
2. Assess and discuss the threats to marine biodiversity from non-fishing related activities and the management strategies (or lack thereof) to combat these. This will include consideration of the principles of cost and effectiveness of potential amelioration strategies for fishing and non-fishing related activities (note, it will not be within the scope of this project to carry out cost-benefit analyses for individual strategies or fisheries).
3. Align the accepted benefits of ‘reserves’ where all fishing is excluded (such as for scientific reference points) with realistic expectations for ‘off-reserve’ benefits and the degree to which area management is an appropriate ecosystem-based approach to fisheries management for individual fisheries across the whole area of selected fisheries.
View Filter

Research

Organisation