The fourth round of international negotiations seeking binding measures to prevent unregulated fisheries in the Arctic high sea, which took place 15-18 March 2017 in Reykjavik, Iceland, made good headway toward implementing a first governance agreement, confirmed the European Commission (EC).
The Arctic region is warming at almost twice the rate of the global average. Over time, rising temperatures and shrinking ice cover may make fish stocks more productive and lead to changes in their spatial distributions. As a result, the Arctic high seas areas could become attractive for commercial fisheries in the medium to long-term. Yet so far, most of the Arctic high seas are not covered by any international conservation and management regime.
Against this background, the meeting in Reykjavik brought together delegations from Canada, the People’s Republic of China, the Kingdom of Denmark (in respect of the Faroes Islands and Greenland), the EU, Japan, the Republic of Korea, the Kingdom of Norway, the Russian Federation and the United States.
The EC said good progress was made by delegations on a draft for a legally binding agreement. This text would be a first step for possibly moving toward one or more regional fisheries management organizations or arrangements for the Central Arctic Ocean.
Another round of negotiations will take place in the near future with a view to finalizing the text.
“I am encouraged by the commitment of all parties to take measures to prevent unregulated commercial fishing in the high seas area of the central Arctic Ocean. A final agreement is now in reach. Safeguarding healthy marine ecosystems in the central Arctic is a priority in the EU’s Arctic policy as well as its ocean governance initiative. This agreement would fill an important gap in the current ocean governance system,” said Karmenu Vella, EU commissioner for the environment, fisheries and maritime affairs.
Sound stewardship of the high seas parts of the Central Arctic Ocean has a prominent place in the EU’s integrated Arctic policy as well as under the EU’s Ocean Governance initiative, said the EC. This includes a responsible approach towards Arctic marine resources while respecting the rights of indigenous peoples.
Since 2009, the EU has maintained that no commercial fisheries should begin in the Arctic high seas before a science-based and precautionary management regime is in place. In particular, the EU would support a multilateral agreement that prevents unregulated high seas fisheries in the Central Arctic Ocean until a Regional Fisheries Management Organization (RFMO) or arrangement is in place.
In April last year, the High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and the EC adopted a policy proposal to guide the actions of the EU in the Arctic region.