The mice that roared: how eight tiny countries took on foreign fishing fleets
Source: The Guardian
The mice that roared: how eight tiny countries took on foreign fishing fleets
Eight Pacific countries created a revolutionary system that brings in $500m a year and prevents the overfishing that blights other regions
Christopher Pala
Wed 16 Jun 2021 00.59 BST
It has been described as the most remarkable achievement of the Pacific island countries in the last 50 years.
In 1982, eight, mostly minuscule Pacific island countries in whose waters much of the worlds skipjack tuna was caught got together and decided to do something to get a share of the profits, of which they received precisely nothing.
In a shining example of regional cooperation, the group, known as the Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA), successively outmanoeuvred the United States, Japan and Taiwan, and later mainland China and the European Union.
It was a David versus Goliath situation from the start, said Jonathan Pryke, director of the Pacific Islands Program of the Lowy Institute in Sydney.
Over four decades of trial and error, they created a system that Pryke calls revolutionary that today not only yields them half a billion dollars a year but also prevents the overfishing that international fishing fleets have carried out to deplete the waters off most poor countries.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jun/16/the-mice-that-roared-how-eight-tiny-countries-took-on-foreign-fishing-fleets