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A huge
Dutch super-trawler was Tuesday given the go-ahead to fish in Australian waters
but with tough conditions to minimize by-catch such as dolphins, seals and sea
lions.
The
9,500-ton FV Margiris repelled Greenpeace protesters to dock at Port Lincoln in
South Australia last Thursday for re-flagging as an Australian vessel before
its proposed deployment to Tasmania for bait-fishing.
Environment
Minister Tony Burke sought legal advice about whether he could intervene over
concerns that dolphins and other marine life would inadvertently get swept up
in its huge nets.
But he said
he had been told he does not have the power to block it fishing in Australian
waters.
“Under
national environmental law I don’t have the power to block it altogether,” he
told ABC television, but said the trawler’s operators would have to prove they
were doing everything necessary to minimize by-catch.
“What I do
have is the legal power to impose a number of restrictions on it based on the
impact it can have, not on the fish that it’s targeting, but on the by-catch —
the seals, the dolphins, the fish that are protected and listed and I have
responsibility for,” Burke said.
“The big
vessel will have to fish within the rules so that the impact it has on the
environment is no more than if it was fishing on a small vessel,” he added.
Under
conditions imposed by the government, fishing will have to be suspended if a
dolphin dies in the ship’s nets or if three or more seals perish. It will also
be banned from sea lion hunting grounds.
The trawler
will also be required to have an observer on board and to record its activities
on an underwater camera.
The
143-meter (469-foot) Margiris sparked protests among conservation groups and
local fishermen when it was announced earlier this year that it would fish off
Tasmania.
The
Tasmanian businessman behind the Margiris venture said the restrictions were
acceptable, and workable.
“I think
what he’s suggesting sounds reasonable, and we’ll certainly study those
conditions very closely,” Seafish Tasmania director Gerry Geen told the
broadcaster.
“But on the
face of it I think that they’re the sort of measures that will help us to
reduce by-catch down to a very low level and we’ll be very pleased to go along
with them.”
The
Australian Fisheries Management Authority has dismissed concerns about
over-fishing, saying the trawler would be allowed to catch just 10 percent of
available fish and would have little if any impact on the broader eco-system.
Agence France-Presse

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