Mr. Chairman, I want to thank the standing committee for extending me an invitation to appear before this committee on a very critical public policy issue that will have major implications for many thousands of Canadians and many hundreds of coastal communities in Atlantic Canada, Quebec, and Nunavut in the decades ahead.
The proposed new NAFO convention, if ratified in its present form, will not safeguard the future interests of Canadians who depend on the fishery resources of the northwest Atlantic for their livelihood, nor will the proposed new NAFO convention provide assurances that these resources will be managed any more effectively than they are under the existing NAFO convention.
Mr. Chairman and honourable members, I have followed the NAFO issue closely in my retirement over these past several years. The public discussion and debate on the matter in recent months, including the testimonies of a number of previous witnesses who have appeared before this committee and before the Senate committee on fisheries, convinced me to accept your invitation to appear.
I would note, however, that when concerns were first raised over the proposed new NAFO convention some 18 months or more ago, I conveyed my concerns at that time in a private letter to the Honourable Loyola Hearn, then Minister of Fisheries and Oceans. More recently, I conveyed similar concerns through the media.
I have not conveyed these concerns as an armchair observer with no direct knowledge of or direct involvement with NAFO down through the years; I am presenting my candid views on the proposed new NAFO convention as a senior retired public servant and concerned citizen of this country who was directly and indirectly involved with NAFO and the very frustrating NAFO decision-making process for approximately 25 years, primarily in my capacity as assistant deputy minister of fisheries and deputy minister of fisheries and aquaculture with the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador.
In related NAFO matters, I also participated in the discussions leading to the adoption of the United Nations agreement on straddling and highly migratory fish stocks in 1995. I was an adviser to the Canadian negotiation delegation on the Canada-France boundary arbitration. I represented the province on various past international negotiations between Canada and other countries in the 1980s, particularly the Canada-Spain bilateral fisheries agreement and the Canada-EU fisheries agreement, including the discussions that led to the resolution of the infamous turbot war. I was also one of the principal coordinators of a massive national and international foreign overfishing campaign that the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador was forced to undertake beginning in the late 1980s.
I am a graduate of Memorial University of Newfoundland and the University of British Columbia. I was born in a coastal Newfoundland fishing village where extended members of my family have had an uninterrupted 260-year history in the fishing industry.
Mr. Chairman, virtually every witness who has appeared before this committee has stated that NAFO has been a dismal failure. I fully agree. I also fully agree with a statement in August 2007 by Dr. Arthur May, a former deputy minister of Fisheries and Oceans, an Officer of the Order of Canada, and the first chairman of NAFO. His statement was that “NAFO is so broken that it can't be fixed.” I also fully agree with his stated position that the current plan to amend the convention could come with some serious consequences for Canada.
The issue before us, therefore, is what it will take to give every assurance that northwest Atlantic fish stocks will be managed in a far more sustainable manner in the future and in a manner that safeguards Canada's interests in the future far more effectively than in the past.
NAFO and its 1949 and 1976 predecessor, ICNAF, both failed because there was little or no political will on the part of some of its key foreign members to make them work for the long-term sustainability of the fishery resources that were being managed and for the very sustainability of adjacent fishing communities with a critical dependence on the resources of the northwest Atlantic.
Mr. Chairman, by way of illustration, over the 1986-1994 period, the European community was assigned NAFO quotas of various NAFO-managed stocks totalling 164,000 tonnes. During this same period, the EU admitted to harvesting 851,000 tonnes of these same stocks, in addition to catches from Canadian-managed stocks to which the EU had no entitlement whatsoever, such as 2J3KL cod. To make the picture even more appalling, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans estimated that the actual catch exceeded 1.3 million tonnes, a staggering nine times the actual EU entitlement. And people wonder why the fishery resources outside 200 miles collapsed.
A recent witness before this committee and the Senate committee stated that there is nothing new or better in this convention than the existing convention that will change the behaviour of fishing captains on the water. If that were the single biggest problem, we might make progress. However, I should point out that foreign fishing captains aren't the individuals on the NAFO member delegations that lodge formal objections to NAFO decisions or reject NAFO's Scientific Council decisions in the Fisheries Commission of NAFO. Indeed, in large measure, decisions like these actually enable captains, with the full blessings of their member states, to exceed what otherwise would pass as sustainable and precautionary quota levels as required under the United Nations fisheries agreement.
We have been assured by the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans that NAFO's old ways have changed. Yet at the most recent NAFO meeting, the Fisheries Commission of NAFO did what it has excelled at best for most of its history: rejecting specific recommendations of NAFO's Scientific Council on several important stocks—and suprisingly, I might add, with Canada's full concurrence at the past September NAFO meeting. In the case of the reopened 3M cod fishery under moratoria for 10 years, the United States and Norway—Norway being the only NAFO member to have ratified the proposed NAFO convention to date—voted against this decision.
A new NAFO, if that is the route to be taken by Canada in the management of stocks straddling and immediately adjacent to a sovereign territory, must have the teeth to safeguard the interests of our coastal communities in the future; otherwise Canada's influence over the management of these stocks will leave Canada, in the words of Dr. Arthur May, with a minority of one in its own backyard, not a majority of eight on all critical NAFO management decisions. I ask rhetorically, is this the solution for our hundreds of coastal fishing communities in response to NAFO's dismal past performance?
This committee has been told the following by a number of those witnesses supporting ratification of the proposed NAFO convention.
The difference between a majority plus one and the two-thirds majority needed on future changes to quota allocation shares is neither here nor there, even though this amendment was earlier touted as a plus for Canada. Moreover, the two-thirds vote will apply to conservation measures as well, thereby making it far more difficult, I might add, for Canada to get support for effective measures in the future, given NAFO's past dismal conservation record.
Proponents of the new convention have stated that there is nothing in the new convention that will change the behaviour of fishing vessels in the NAFO regulatory area. What comfort does this give our coastal communities?
At least one NAFO commissioner has stated that we need not rush to ratify this convention.
Several witnesses, including at least one NAFO commissioner, have stated that it would be preferable not to have the obnoxious, potentially sovereignty-compromising clause in the convention.
Of course, the objection procedure remains in the new convention, and in the words of Professor McDorman, who appeared before this committee, the dispute settlement will take years; moreover, the proceedings of any ad hoc panel established to address any dispute are non-binding.
These concerns are not trivial, and it is absolutely clear that language of the new convention will not serve Canada's interests as the principal coastal state in the NAFO convention and regulatory area. These concerns must be revisited and addressed; otherwise Canada will be entering into an agreement that is terribly flawed when tested against the very reasons that made the existing NAFO convention and NAFO itself dismal failures. If the Government of Canada is not prepared to revisit these concerns, then the proposed new NAFO convention must be rejected outright.
Thank you.