April 9, 2004
Baffin fisheries group
weathers a storm
BFC adjusts course to
meet community concerns
JIM
BELL
Beset by external criticism
and internal dissatisfaction, Nunavut's three-year-old experiment in inter-community
quota sharing, the Baffin Fisheries Coalition, is still hanging together.
"I've been married
for 20 years and, hey, I have a fight occasionally. But I also make-up as many
times as I have a fight, you know? There's adjustments to be made in any business,
and there's concerns that people have and they are legitimate concerns. If you
don't talk about them, you can't solve them," said Gerry Ward, the organization's
CEO, after the end of BFC board meetings in Iqaluit last week.
The member of understanding
that now holds the coalition's 11 partners together expires at the end of next
month, and Ward says a new memorandum-of-understanding will deal with strong
concerns made by community hunting and trapping organizations, who want more
emphasis on local inshore fisheries.
"They all had some
concerns, their concerns were addressed, and we're working on them," Ward
says.
At least two Baffin hunters
and trappers organizations, the Nattivak HTO of Qikiqtarjuaq and the Pangnirtung
HTO, have threatened to pull out of the partnership. Other members have been
contemplating similar moves.
"Each individual member
has their own internal concerns with regard to their participation in the fishery.
It's very difficult to keep everyone together," said a source close to
the BFC who asked not to be identified.
Ward warns, however, that
the collapse of the BFC would cause enormous damage to the development of a
genuinely Nunavut-based commercial fishing industry. He says only the BFC has
the financial clout to re-invest profits in the purchase of a Nunavut-owned
factory-freezer trawler, and in training and scientific research.
The BFC, made up of the
Qikiqtaaluk Corp., six HTOs and four private companies, is a not-for-profit
corporation set up in May of 2001, after the federal minister of Fisheries and
Oceans gave 100 per cent of the turbot quota in divison "OA" to Nunavut
interests in 2000.
Division OA, which starts
just south of Qikiqtarjuaq, hugs the Baffin coast, and stretches north as far
as Ellesemere Island. It's still being called an "exploratory fishery,"
not ready for full-blown commercial development.
The Nunavut Wildlife Management
Board agreed - with the consent of community HTOs - to give all of zone OA's
turbot quota to the BFC every year - equal to 4,280 tonnes in 2003.
The BFC then uses revenues
from that fishery to pay for training and research. It's been setting aside
30 per cent of revenues towards the purchase of a 60 to 65-metre factory-freezer
trawler for Nunavut, capable of fishing both turbot and shrimp. A used vessel
of that type could cost up to $20 million, and a new one about $30 to $35 million.
That would be a major step
towards creating a large-scale industrial fishery in Nunavut - but it's that
vision that's drawing criticism from many quarters.
In Ottawa last week, the
Senate Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans released a 49-page report
on the Nunavut fishery, after getting a series of oral and written presentations
from numerous witnesses last fall.
The Senators on the committee
found there are "two very different and competing visions for Nunavut's
fishery" - the development of a deep-sea industrial fishery versus the
development of a community-based, small-boat fishery.
And the Senators say it's
a small-scale fishery that Nunavut Inuit seem to want.
"Their clear preference
was for small-boat, community-based fishing, a completely different strategy
than that of purchasing a factory trawler to create employment," their
report says.
But Ward says the Senate
committee doesn't understand the BFC.
"One of the objectives
of the BFC was to develop an inshore fishery. We're supportive of an inshore
fishery," Ward says.
Ward also says the Senate
committee paid far too much attention to southern fishing companies who don't
like the fact that Nunavut - and the BFC - now has 100 per cent of the turbot
quota in division OA.
"Why wouldn't they
be upset, now that Nunavut is organized through the BFC, and we're planning
to fight for every pound of fish that's in the water?" Ward says.
The turbot area south of
OA, known as division OB, was mostly handed out to southern companies like Seafreez
Foods Inc. in the late 1980s and early 1990s, so that Nunavut interests only
get 27 per cent of the OB turbot quota.
That's one reason Nunavut
only gets $9 million worth of value from an adjacent offshore fishery worth
$98.5 million a year - 90 per cent of which ends up in the South.
"If you look at Seafreez,
there's a company that's taking 1,900 tonnes of fish in Nunavut's adjacent waters
with no investment up-front and here we are in Nunavut with only 1,500 tonnes
[in OB] for all of Nunavut," Ward says.
Ward even wonders why the
Senate committee members even entertained views from such southern firms.
"Would a review of
the crab fishery in Newfoundland, or the lobster fishery in P.E.I. look for
input from Nunavut? These are all comments from people who have no right to
be here, period."
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