Skip to main content

Hands off: Canada to sign international moratorium on High Arctic fishing

Ice floats in Slidre Fjord outside the Eureka Weather Station on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Monday, July 24, 2006. Photo by The Canadian Press/Jeff McIntosh

Support strong Canadian climate journalism for 2025

Help us raise $150,000 by December 31. Can we count on your support?
Goal: $150k
$32k

Canada is to join more than a dozen countries Wednesday in signing a deal that would block commercial fishing in the High Arctic for 16 years and begin unravelling ecological mysteries at the top of the world.

Experts say it's a rare example of the globe coming together to prevent environmental problems before they start.

"There's an agreement before the problem exists," said Peter Harrison, a professor of Arctic policy at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., and a former top federal bureaucrat.

"It's a major step in the right direction."

The deal is to be signed in Ilulissat, Greenland, by the five nations with Arctic coastlines. Others signing on will be China, Iceland, Japan, South Korea and the European Union. Inuit from three countries are also involved.

"To actually anticipate a problem and bring countries together and come up with a system that is science-based is a model of what international diplomacy should do." @michael_byers on "remarkable" fishing ban in the High #Arctic

The agreement, which was negotiated last year, applies to northern waters at least 200 kilometres away from the shores of any coastal states. That amounts to 2.8 million square kilometres of ocean — about the size of the Mediterranean Sea.

'Remarkable agreement'

As well as a commercial fishing ban, the agreement commits the countries to major scientific work on the entire ecosystem of a region that climate change is making increasingly accessible. Once frozen year-round, about 40 per cent of those waters are now open during the summer.

No commercial fishing currently takes place in the High Arctic, but fish stocks are shifting and fishers and scientists have wondered what the northernmost seas on the planet hold.

The deal commits signatories to developing a science plan within two years to look at the entire ecosystem, not just commercial possibilities.

"You can't just look at fish," Harrison said. "You can't just say, 'How many cod are there?' and move on."

Michael Byers, a professor of international law at the University of British Columbia, called the agreement remarkable.

"Governments usually don't devote any diplomatic effort to anything other than an immediate crisis. To actually anticipate a problem and bring countries together and come up with a system that is science-based is a model of what international diplomacy should do."

The agreement doesn't come into force until it's ratified by all signatories, which could take about a year.

Harrison said Canada should be taking the lead in designing and implementing the science program.

"We've developed significant expertise on this over the years," he said.

"The States are a bit befuddled, for a whole variety of reasons. It's difficult to put things in Russia, and it goes on and on. The logical leader in this is Canada."

The Department of Fisheries and Oceans declined to lay out Canada's plans for the agreement until after the signing. A spokesman said in an email that the government recently announced up to $10 million to support satellite technologies to help remotely identify and track suspected illegal fishing vessels.

"Fisheries and Oceans Canada is committed to working globally to build strong partnerships to address the issue of unregulated fishing," wrote Vance Chow.

— Follow Bob Weber on Twitter at @row1960

Comments