article 11 and 12
TRANSCRIPT
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AN ASSIGNMENT
ON
CODE OF CONDUCT OF RESPONSIBLE FISHERIES: ARTICLE 11
AND 12
FOR THE COURSE
ADVANCES IN FISHING TECHNOLOGY
FRM 512 (2+1)
By
Satish kumar koushlesh
FRM MA1 07
CENTRAL INSTITUTE OF FISHERIES EDUCATION(Deemed University)
Indian Council of Agricultural Research Versova, Mumbai - 400 061
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DECLARATION
I here by declare that the above assignment named Code of conduct for
responsible fisheries: Article 11 and 12 is solely prepared by me by referring to
various references and not simply copied from any of the colleagues .
Date: 15/12/11 Satish kumar koushlesh
Place: Versova FRM MA1-07
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CONTENTS
TOPIC PAGENUMBER
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INTRODUCTION
Fisheries, including aquaculture, provide a vital source of food, employment,
recreation, trade and economic well-being for people throughout the world, both
for present and future generations and should therefore be conducted in a
responsible manner. This Code sets out principles and international standards of
behaviour for responsible practices with a view to ensuring the effective
conservation, management and development of living aquatic resources, with
due respect for the ecosystem and biodiversity. The Code recognizes the
nutritional, economic, social, environmental and cultural importance of fisheries
and the interests of all those concerned with the fishery sector. The Code takes
into account the biological characteristics of the resources and their
environment and the interests of consumers and other users. States and all those
involved in fisheries are encouraged to apply the Code and give effect to it.
The Code ofConduct for Responsible Fisheries ,adopted on October 31, 1995
by more than 170 members of the FAO, has been described as one of the most
important international instruments devised for management of planets aquatic
resources. A collection of principles, goals and elements of actions, it sets out
standard of behaviour for responsible practices in fisheries. The aim: to ensure
effective conservation, management and development of aquatic resources.
The code is voluntary in nature and directed at all stake holders of fisheries its
production, processing and marketing; its governance and administration.
ARTICLE 11 - POST-HARVEST PRACTICES AND TRADE
11.1 Responsible fish utilization
11.1.1 States should adopt appropriate measures to ensure the right ofconsumers to safe, wholesome and unadulterated fish and fishery products.
11.1.2 States should establish and maintain effective national safety and quality
assurance systems to protect consumer health and prevent commercial fraud.
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11.1.3 States should set minimum standards for safety and quality assurance and
make sure that these standards are effectively applied throughout the industry.
They should promote the implementation of quality standards agreed within the
context of the FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius Commission and other relevant
organizations or arrangements.
11.1.4 States should cooperate to achieve harmonization, or mutual recognition,
or both, of national sanitary measures and certification programmes as
appropriate and explore possibilities for the establishment of mutually
recognized control and certification agencies.
11.1.5 States should give due consideration to the economic and social role of
the post-harvest fisheries sector when formulating national policies for the
sustainable development and utilization of fishery resources.
11.1.6 States and relevant organizations should sponsor research in fish
technology and quality assurance and support projects to improve post-harvest
handling of fish, taking into account the economic, social, environmental and
nutritional impact of such projects.
11.1.7 States, noting the existence of different production methods, should
through cooperation and by facilitating the development and transfer of
appropriate technologies, ensure that processing, transporting and storage
methods are environmentally sound.
11.1.8 States should encourage those involved in fish processing, distribution
and marketing to:
a) reduce post-harvest losses and waste;
b) improve the use of by-catch to the extent that this is consistent with
responsible fisheries management practices; and
c) use the resources, especially water and energy, in particular wood, in an
environmentally sound manner.
11.1.9 States should encourage the use of fish for human, consumption and
promote consumption of fish whenever appropriate.
11.1.10 States should cooperate in order to facilitate the production of value-
added products by developing countries.
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11.1.11 States should ensure that international and domestic trade in fish and
fishery products accords with sound conservation and management practices
through improving the identification of the origin of fish and fishery products
traded.
11.1.12 States should ensure that environmental effects of post-harvest activities
are considered in the development of related laws, regulations and policies
without creating any market distortions.
11.2 Responsible international trade
11.2.1 The provisions of this Code should be interpreted and applied in
accordance with the principles, rights and obligations established in the World
Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement.
11.2.2 International trade in fish and fishery products should not compromise
the sustainable development of fisheries and responsible utilization of living
aquatic resources.
11.2.3 States should ensure that measures affecting international trade in fish
and fishery products are transparent, based, when applicable, on scientific
evidence, and are in accordance with internationally agreed rules.
11.2.4 Fish trade measures adopted by States to protect human or animal life or
health, the interests of consumers or the environment, should not be
discriminatory and should be in accordance with internationally agreed trade
rules, in particular the principles, rights and obligations established in the
Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures and the
Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade of the WTO.
11.2.5 States should further liberalize trade in fish and fishery products and
eliminate barriers and distortions to trade such as duties, quotas and non-tariff
barriers in accordance with the principles, rights and obligations of the WTO
Agreement.
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11.2.6 States should not directly or indirectly create unnecessary or hidden
barriers to trade which limit the consumer's freedom of choice of supplier or
that restrict market access.
11.2.7 States should not condition access to markets to access to resources. This
principle does not preclude the possibility of fishing agreements between States
which include provisions referring to access to resources, trade and access to
markets, transfer of technology, scientific research, training and other relevant
elements.
11.2.8 States should not link access to markets to the purchase of specific
technology or sale of other products.
11.2.9 States should cooperate in complying with relevant international
agreements regulating trade in endangered species.
11.2.10 States should develop international agreements for trade in live
specimens where there is a risk of environmental damage in importing or
exporting States.
11.2.11 States should cooperate to promote adherence to, and effective
implementation of relevant international standards for trade in fish and fishery
products and living aquatic resource conservation.
11.2.12 States should not undermine conservation measures for living aquatic
resources in order to gain trade or investment benefits.
11.2.13 States should cooperate. to develop internationally acceptable rules or
standards for trade in fish and fishery products in accordance with the
principles, rights, and obligations established in the WTO Agreement.
11.2.14 States should cooperate with each other and actively participate in
relevant regional and multilateral fora, such as the WTO in order to ensure
equitable, nondiscriminatory trade in fish and fishery products as well as wide
adherence to multilaterally agreed fishery conservation measures.
11.2.15 States, aid agencies, multilateral development banks and other relevant
international organizations should ensure that their policies and practices related
to the promotion of international fish trade and export production do not result
in environmental degradation or adversely impact the nutritional rights and
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needs of people for whom fish is critical to their health and well-being and for
whom other comparable sources of food are not readily available or affordable.
11.3 Laws and regulations relating to fish trade
11.3.1 Laws, regulations and administrative procedures applicable to
international trade in fish and fishery products should be transparent, as simple
as possible, comprehensible and, when appropriate, based on scientific
evidence.
11.3.2 States, in accordance with their national laws, should facilitate
appropriate consultation with and participation of industry as well as
environmental and consumer groups in the development and implementation of
laws and regulations related to trade in fish and fishery products.
11.3.3 States should simplify their laws, regulations and administrative
procedures applicable to trade in fish and fishery products without jeopardizing
their effectiveness.
11.3.4 When a State introduces changes to its legal requirernents affecting trade
in fish and fishery products with other States, sufficient information and time
should be given to allow the States and producers affected to introduce, as
appropriate, the changes needed in their processes and procedures. In this
connection, consultation with affected States on the time frame for
implementation of the changes would be desirable. Due consideration should be
given to requests from developing countries for temporary derogations from
obligations.
11.3.5 States should periodically review laws and regulations applicable to
international trade in fish and fishery products in order to determine whether the
conditions which gave rise to their introduction continue to exist.
11.3.6 States should harmonize as far as possible the standards applicable tointernational trade in fish and fishery products in accordance with relevant
internationally recognized provisions.
11.3.7 States should collect, disseminate and exchange timely, accurate and
pertinent statistical information on international trade in fish and fishery
products through relevant national institutions and international organizations.
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11.3.8 States should promptly notify interested States, WTO and other
appropriate international organizations on the development of and changes to
laws, regulations and administrative procedures applicable to international trade
in fish and fishery products.
ARTICLE 12 - FISHERIES RESEARCH
12.1 States should recognize that responsible fisheries require the availability of
a sound .scientific basis to assist fisheries managers and other interested parties
in making decisions. Therefore, States should ensure that appropriate research is
conducted into} all aspects of fisheries including biology, ecology, technology,
environmental science, economics, social science, aquaculture and nutritional
science. States should -ensure the availability of research facilities and provideappropriate training, staffing and institution building to conduct the research,
taking into account the special needs of developing countries.
12.2 States should establish an appropriate institutional framework to determine
the applied research which is required and its proper use.
12.3 States should ensure that data generated by research are analyzed, that the
results of such analyses are published, respecting confidentiality where
appropriate, and distributed in a timely and readily understood fashion, in order
that the best scientific evidence is made available as a contribution to fisheries
conservation, management and development. In the absence of adequate
.scientific information, appropriate research should be initiated as soon as
possible.
12.4 States should collect reliable and accurate data which are required to assess
the status of fisheries and ecosystems, including data on bycatch, discards and
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waste. Where appropriate, this data .should be provided, at an appropriate time
and level of aggregation, to relevant States and subregional, regional and global
fisheries organizations.
12.5 States should be able to monitor and assess the state of the stocks under
their jurisdiction, including the impacts of ecosystem changes resulting from
fishing pressure, pollution or habitat alteration. They should also establish the
research capacity necessary to assess the effects of' climate or environment
change on fish stocks and aquatic ecosystems.
12.6 States should support and strengthen national research capabilities to meet
acknowledged scientific standards.
12.7 States, as appropriate in cooperation with relevant international
organisations, should encourage research to ensure optimum utilization of
fishery resources and stimulate the research required to support national policies
related to fish as food.
12.8 States should conduct research into, and monitor, human food supplies
from aquatic sources and the environment from which they are taken and ensure
that .here is no adverse health impact on consumers. The results of such
research should be made publicly available.
12.9 States should ensure that the economic, social, marketing and institutional
aspects of fisheries are adequately researched and that comparable data aregenerated for ongoing monitoring, analysis and policy formulation.
12.10 States should carry out studies on the selectivity of fishing gear, the
environmental impact of fishing gear on target species and on the behaviour of
target and non-target species in relation to such fishing gear as an aid for
management decisions and with a view to minimizing non-utilized catches as
well as safeguarding the biodiversity of ecosystems and the aquatic habitat.
12.11 States should ensure that before the commercial introduction of new types
of gear, a scientific evaluation of their impact on the fisheries and ecosystemswhere they will be used should be undertaken. The effects of such gear
introductions should be monitored.
12.12 States should investigate and document traditional fisheries knowledge
and technologies, in particular those applied to small-scale fisheries, in order to
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assess their application to sustainable fisheries conservation, management and
development.
12.13 States should promote the use of research results as a basis for the setting
of management objectives, reference points and performance criteria, as well as
for ensuring adequate linkage, between applied research and fisheriesmanagement,
12.14 States conducting scientific research activities in waters under the
jurisdiction of another State should ensure that their vessels comply with the
laws and regulations of that State and international law.
12.15 States should promote the adoption of uniform guidelines governing
fisheries research conducted on the high seas.
12.16 States should, where appropriate, support the establishment ofmechanisms, including, inter alia, the adoption of uniform guidelines, to
facilitate research at the subregional or regional level and should encourage the
sharing of the results of such research with other regions.
12.17 States, either directly or with the support of relevant international
organizations, should develop collaborative technical and research programmes
to improve understanding of the biology, environment and status of
transboundary aquatic stocks.
12.18 States and relevant international organizations should promote and
enhance the research capacities of developing countries, inter alia, in the areas
of data collection and analysis, information, science and technology, human
resource development anti provision of research facilities, in order for them to
participate effectively in the conservation, management and sustainable use of
living aquatic resources.
12.19 Competent rotor national organizations should, where appropriate, render
technical and financial support to States upon request and when engaged in
research investigations aimed at evaluating stocks which have been previouslyunfished or very lightly fished.
12.20 Relevant technical and financial international organizations should, upon
request, support States in their research efforts, devoting special attention to
developing countries, in particular the least developed among them and small
island developing countries.
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ARTICLE 11 AND 12: IMPLEMENTATION
CCRF Article 11 deals with post-harvest practices and trade, and is also
relevant to aquaculture. Responsible fish utilization is one of the main chapters
of this article, claiming the consumer's' right to safe, wholesome and
unadulterated fish and fishery products (see also FAO, 1998d). It refers to the
work of the FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius Commission and calls on States to
promote the implementation of quality standards agreed therein. Those involved
in the processing and marketing of fish and fishery products are encouraged to
reduce post-harvest losses and waste, to improve the use of by-catch to the
extent that this is consistent with responsible fisheries management practices
and to use resources such as water and energy, in particular wood, in an
environmentally sound manner. The manufacture of value-added fishery
products by developing countries is advocated and States are requested to
ensure that domestic and international trade in fishery products accord with
sound conservation and management practices. This latter remark points
towards the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild
Fauna and Flora (CITES). The Convention can limit, regulate and prohibit trade
in these species and products there from if they are listed in one of the Annexes.
During the consultations leading to the CCRF, there was a debate of the FAO
membership which was related to the remaining two chapters of Article 11
(Responsible International Trade, and Laws and Regulations relating to Fish
Trade), and which was strongly influenced by the intention not to create clauseswhich would contrast with provisions issued under the Agreements leading to
the Establishment of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and to make it clear
that the formulation of trade rules is the prerogative of the WTO. The Code also
states that policies and practices related to the promotion of international fish
trade and export production should not result in environmental degradation or
adversely impact the nutritional rights and needs of people for whom fish is
critical to their health and well-being and for whom other comparable sources of
food are not readily available or affordable.
According to the Code, laws, regulations and administrative procedures
applicable to international fish trade should be transparent, as simple as
possible, comprehensible and, when appropriate, based on scientific evidence.
They should be reviewed periodically and simplified without jeopardizing their
effectiveness. In cases where regulations are changed, sufficient time should be
allowed for preparing the implementation of the Code and consultation with
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affected countries would be desirable. In this connection the Code stipulates that
due consideration be given to requests from developing countries for temporary
derogation from obligations.
In summing up, the Code ofConduct for Responsible Fisheries was adopted by
FAO Member Governments in 1995 and is considered as the practical
foundation on which to establish sustainable fisheries and aquaculture in the
future. The Codes structure and its different components correspond roughly to
different groups of stakeholders (fishermen, managers, processors, traders, fish
farmers and scientists). The FAO Fisheries Department has been producing a
number of Technical Guidelines to assist those concerned in the implementation
and adaptation of the recommendations of the Code ofConduct (FAO, 1996a, b,
1997, 1998d). Such guidelines could be complemented as required by specific
technical protocols, codes of practice, instruction manuals, best management
practices, etc.
Responsible Post-harvest Practices and Trade
The Regional Guidelines for Responsible Fisheries in Southeast Asia:
Responsible Post-Harvest Practices and Trade, serves as reference in identifying
directions and priority actions for the implementation of Article 11 (Postharvest
Practices and Trade) of the CCRF. Considering that traditional fish products in
the ASEAN region still represent a significantly high amount of total fish
utilization, the Guidelines also aimed to address this concern under its threemain topics: responsible fish utilization, responsible international trade, and
laws and regulations related to fish trade. The Guidelines also incorporated
relevant provisions of the Resolution and Plan of Action for Food Security for
the ASEAN Region. Coordinated by the SEAFDEC Marine Fisheries
Department (MFRD), the Guidelines was prepared after a series of
consultations with core experts from SEAFDEC and ASEAN Member
Countries. It aims to achieve food security and promote trade in domestic,
intraregional and international markets, considering that only few countries in
the region have the capability to develop food safety and quality assurance intheir fish products especially those intended for the foreign markets.
1. Moving towards a regional fisheries management mechanism
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The recommendation of the ASEAN-SEAFDEC MemberCountries during the
2006 Consultation in Phuket, Thailand on the establishment of a Regional
Fisheries Management Body as a major long-term policy issue or area for
collaboration, gained impetus upon its approval by the 39th Meeting of the
C
ouncil Meeting in 2007 Siem Reap,C
ambodia.
2. Willingness to cooperate in bordering (or trans-boundary) water areas
A consensus to promote cooperation between neighbouring countries on the
integration of habitat and fisheries management (Refugia) was reached under a
common management mechanism. The areas recommended include the Gulf of
Thailand, Andaman Sea, South China Sea and Sulu/Sulawesi Sea. With the
cooperation of Cambodia, Vietnam and Thailand, the project successfully
initiated the process in two locations:
Trad Koh Kong (Thailand Cambodia)
Kampot Phu Quoc (Cambodia Vietnam)
3. Management of Fishing Capacity in Southeast Asia
Since management of fishing capacity is considered the fisheries management
issue and considering the regional nature of fishing operation and migration of
fish workers, regional cooperation could be attained upon addressing the
following issues:
As there is no aggregate data on fishing capacity at national or regional level
and that available information is more site-specific and relates to projects rather
than statistical information, the lack of statistics with respect to fishing
capacity especially at small-scale level remains a critical problem
Fishing capacity of large-scale fisheries to be addressed in parallel with small-
scale fisheries
The need for alternative, supplementary income opportunities to facilitate exit
from fishery
Transboundary and regional aspects of Illegal, Unregistered and Unreported
fishing (IUU)
Social aspects of reduction and management of fishing capacity
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4. Successful promotion of cooperation and innovative approaches to
management
Establishing cooperation with other institutions and projects is crucial to seek
broad cooperation even beyond the sphere of fisheries agencies for long-term
results. Such cooperation is important in addressing the social, environmental,
economical and legal aspects in order to develop innovative approaches for
improved regional cooperation. Thus, the project has been instrumental in:
Promoting integration of fisheries management into habitat management
Initiating activities on providing incentives to fishermen that are fishing in a
sustainable way (eco-labelling)
Improving coordination between fisheries, environmental and other agencies,
including involvement of NGOs at various levels
Introducing adaptive management through dialogue among projects and
institutions
Safety and Quality Requirements
The food and feed scares of last decades (bovine spongiform encephalopathyBSE, dioxins, avian flu, SARS, foot and mouth disease) have exposed the
weakness in traditional food control systems.L
ikewise, the increasedglobalization of fish trade has highlighted the risk of cross-border transmission
of hazardous agents and the rapid development of aquaculture has been
accompanied by the emergence of food safety concerns, in particular residues ofveterinary drugs.
These developments have led to the need for the development of a food safetystrategy applicable throughout the entire fish food chain- from farm or sea to
table. This strategy must be scientifically based, adaptive and responsive tochanges in the food production chain. It is articulated around the use of riskanalysis to develop food safety objectives and standards and on the
implementation ofHazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP) systems.
FAO/WHO has identified the following five needs for a strategy in support of a
food chain approach to food safety, including for fish and fishery products:
Fish safety and quality from a food chain perspective should incorporate the
three elements ofrisk analysis - assessment, management and communicationensuring an institutional separation of sciencebasedrisk assessment from risk
management.
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Tracing techniques (traceability) from the primary producer (including
animal feed and medicines used in aquaculture), through post-harvest treatment,processing and distribution to the consumer must be improved.
Harmonisation of standards, implying increased development and wider useof internationally agreed, scientifically-based standards is necessary.
Equivalence in food safety systems achieving similar levels of protection
against fish-borne hazards and quality defects whatever means of control areused must be further developed.
Increased emphasis on risk avoidance or prevention at source within thewhole food chain from farm or sea to plate .
The implementation of the food chain approach requires an enabling policy anda regulatory environment at national and international levels with clearly
defined rules and standards, establishment of appropriate food control systemsand programmes at national levels, and provision of appropriate training and
capacity building. Development and implementation of Good Aquaculture
Practices (GAP), Good Hygienic Practices (GHP) and HACCP are required
in the food chain step(s)
.Government institutions should develop an enabling policy and a regulatory
environment, organize the control services, train personnel, upgrade the control
facilities and laboratories and develop national surveillance programs forrelevant hazards. The industry should adopt good practices and train personnel
to implement GAP, G HP and HACCP. The support institutions (academia,trade associations, private sector, etc.) should upgrade skills of personnel
involved in the food chain, conduct research on quality, safety and riskassessments, and provide technical support to stakeholders. Finally, consumers
groups and other NGOs should promote consumer education and informationand play a counterbalancing role to ensure that safety and quality is science
based and not driven only by political or economical considerations.
The globalization and further liberalization of world fish trade, while offeringmany benefits and
opportunities, also presents emerging safety and quality challenges. Improvedscientific tools must be adopted and novel flexible approaches to safety must besought to ensure that responsibility for consumer protection is effectively shared
along the food chain and that regulations and standards reflect the most current
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scientific evidence. This requires significant resources which are not alwaysavailable, especially for small scale operations in developing countries.
Fish safety and quality assurance at the beginning of this third millenniumrequires enhanced levels of international co-operation in promoting
transparency, harmonisation, equivalency schemes and standards setting
mechanisms based on science. The SPS/TBT agreements of the WTO and the benchmarking role ofthe Codex alimentarius provide an international
reference in this respect.
Labelling and certification
Certification and labelling have become important competitive parameters to
access international fish markets. Not only must suppliers adhere to theregulatory requirements of importing countries, but additional labels or
certificates may also be required by the importer for commercial and marketing
reasons. In the same way, the supplier may also choose to apply particularlabels or undergo voluntary certification programmes in order to target specific
segments of consumers, thereby gaining a competitive advantage in marketniches.
Similarly, companies may choose to produce according to specific requirementsthat permit them to label their products as environmentally friendly or produced
in respect of certain social values. Examples of such labelling include: "organicproduction" labels, "fair trade" labels", "dolphin-safe tuna" labels or ecolabels
such as those of the Marine Stewardship Council MSC or Friend of the Sea FoS
. An eco-label is a tag or label placed on a product that certifies that the fish wasproduced in an environmentally friendly way. The label provides information at
the point of sale that links the product to the production process.
In fisheries, the increased interest in eco-labels results from the concerns aboutthe dramatic state of the worlds marine resources. The perceived failure of
governments to effectively manage marine resources has led to the developmentof alternative mechanisms for protecting marine life and promoting
sustainability. These are aimed at influencing the purchasing decisions of
consumers and the procurement policies of retailers. Eco-labels are one such
mechanism. Organizations developing and managing an ecolabel developstandards against which applicants wishing to use the label will be judged. Theyalso manage the accreditation and certification process, and market the label to
consumers to ensure recognition and demand for labelled products.
Other mechanisms used by NGOs include;
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Publicity campaigns or organized boycotts or of certain species deemed to bethreatened such
as the Give Swordfish a Break campaign in the United States in the late1990s;
Consumer guides to influence consumers purchasing decisions, such as theBest Fish Guide
of the New Zealand Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society or TheSustainable SeafoodGuide, produced by Eartheasy, Canada;
Putting pressure on retailers to introduce sustainable procurement policies forfish and seafood. This is perhaps most developed in the United Kingdom where
Greenpeace is working with large retailers and produces annual league table,Ranking of the sustainability of supermarkets seafood . Greenpeace also uses
naming and shaming strategies such as media-savvy protests outside retail
outlets.
These strategies can be seen in terms of a continuum from more reactive
mechanisms that highlight and shame bad practice, to more proactive
activities: encouraging consumers to purchase fish from sustainable stocks, andworking with retailers to improve their procurement policies, as well as
rewarding those that do with positive publicity. Buyers and retailers have in turnresponded by imposing private standards and certification back through the
supply chain, especially on producers and processors. These developments have
resulted in the proliferation of certification bodies and schemes designed totrace the origin of fish, its quality and safety, the environmental and/or social
conditions prevailing during fishing, aquaculture production, processing anddistribution (Washington and Ababouch, 2011).
But as standards, certification schemes and labels proliferate; both producers
and consumers are questioning their value. Producers in particular questionwhether these private standards and
certification schemes duplicate or complement government work. In addition
consumers ask if the private schemes really provide better protection for them
and the environment and/or contribute to social equity.
Many producers and exporting countries hold the view that sanitary standards
represent unjustified restrictions to trade, especially where they introducemeasures which duplicate those already applied by government authorities ofthe exporting country. This raises the issue of how to define boundaries between
public regulations dealing with food safety, animal health, environmental andsocial protection on the one hand and private market standards on the other?
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And who is responsible for what and accountable to whom? While governmentsthat are seen to use standards as trade barriers can be challenged through the
rules of WTO, what international mechanism, or agreement, should be invokedto challenge private companies whose standards are judged to create technical
barriers to trade between countries? Several countries and industry associations
have raised serious concerns about the potential for private standards to havetrade limiting or trade distorting effects (WTO, 2008).
Proponents of private standards and certification schemes claim that they
encourage suppliers to force the use of responsible practices in fisheries andaquaculture. Opponents of such standards see them as a private sector attempt toreplace/duplicate governmental policy in fisheries and aquaculture. The key
issue is how private standards and certification schemes, if needed, can bereconciled with the public sectors responsibility to regulate the use of
responsible practices in fisheries and aquaculture, throughout the food chain.
These issues require a concerted international effort. A precondition for an
international understanding and an approach to dealing with this issue is betterknowledge. More must be known about the effects of private standards and
certification schemes. Such knowledge may make it possible to propose
solutions that will ensure coherence of private standards with WTO trademeasures.
It is also necessary to analyze if and how private standards are duplicating or
complementing the work of government authorities. Such an analysis will have
a particular focus on the effects that private standards and certification schemesare having on developing countries capacities to access markets
FISHERIES REASEARCH IN INDIA
(1)By catch Reduction devices :The growing concern on the bycatch due to commercial gear is taken in
to consideration and the development of new devices to be installed ormodification on the existing design of gear is the main thurst area . Central
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Institute of Fishing Technology (CIFT) , Kochi is assigned with thedevelopment of TEDs , Fish eye , Fish window , Radial escapement devices .
(2)Development of selective gears :The CIFT has developed some
advanced variants of the trawl gear used by the traditional trawl fleet .This is to reduce the impact of fishing over the flora and fauna of the
aquatic system e.g. High end opening trawl , High speed demersal trawl ,Duplex and Triplex trawl , separator trawl , Large mesh opening trawl .
(3)Development of FADs : The Fish aggregating device is developed toreduce the fishing time and to flourish the fish stocks .
(4)Remote sensing of marine areas is done to determine the potentialfishing zone (PFZ) and to disseminate the data to the fishermen .
(5)Assessment of the coral reef ecosystem and the mangrove ecosystem .(6)Mechanisation effort for the fishig fleet to reduce the labour intensiveness
.
(7)Development of deep sea fishing fleet .(8)Development of more hygienic processing methods and their
complaiments to the national and international standards ,CONCLUSION
The code is the fundamental base on which the countries policies for trade of
fish and fishery products rely for their development . The non mandatory and
voluntary nature of the code gives the states the sufficient flexibility whileformulating their policies in accordance to the existing situations and scenarios.A wide variety of regulations and norms are adopted by different countries to
sustain their fisheries industries also research on fisheries is being carried out bygovernmental and non governmental agencies to reduce the harmfull effects of
fishing and post harvest activities .
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