High Time for Global Rules on Fishing
Subsidies, the DG and Chair Declare on Ocean Day
[ABS News Service/09.06.2021]
Marking
World Ocean Day on 8 June, Dr Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, Director-General, and Ambassador
Santiago Wills of Colombia, chair of the fisheries subsidies negotiations,
called on WTO members to deliver a long-awaited agreement to curb funding for
harmful fishing. The opportunity to find compromise solutions at the 15 July
ministerial meeting must not be squandered, they said.
"Two
decades is too long for ending subsidies that finance the relentless
overexploitation of our ocean. Governments need to deliver a WTO fisheries
subsidies agreement now," DG Okonjo-Iweala said.
"Members have made real progress but we're not there yet. Next month,
trade ministers from around the world will meet virtually to look at these
negotiations. We must seize this opportunity to narrow the remaining
gaps," she said.
"WTO
rules on fishing subsidies will help to prevent the collapse of global fish stocks.
We need these rules for the sake of the environment, food security and
livelihoods worldwide. It's time to turn the tide in favour
of ocean health and a globally sustainable blue economy," she said.
First
launched in 2001, WTO discussions on fisheries subsidies were given new impetus
in 2015 when the international community made concluding a WTO agreement a
target of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The WTO's 11th
Ministerial Conference in Buenos Aires in 2017 reiterated the call for a fisheries
subsidies agreement. Under these mandates, members are working to secure an
agreement on disciplines to eliminate subsidies for illegal, unreported and
unregulated fishing and to prohibit certain forms of fisheries subsidies that
contribute to overcapacity and overfishing, with special and differential
treatment being an integral part of the negotiations.
"It
will take hard decisions from 164 members, but it is doable. We now have a
complete negotiating text in front of us to help close the gaps," Ambassador
Wills, the chair said, referring to a new draft text he introduced last month
in preparation for the virtual meeting of ministers on 15 July.
He
said that the latest text proposes landing zones for an agreement based on
members' collective work. Since the new text was circulated, members have been
holding nearly continuous meetings in different configurations, dedicated to a
specific theme each week.
"Members
are working hard getting the text as close as possible to a draft on which
ministers can make the remaining political calls. With the finish line so close
at hand, I trust members will rise to the occasion and together make a
difference. The ocean is calling, and we must not let her down," the chair
said.