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US-FFA fish agreement reached Featured

US-FFA fish agreement reached

3 March, 2016. The American Tunaboat Association has confirmed an agreement has been reached for US vessels to purchase treaty licenses from the Fisheries Forum Agency for the remainder of 2016.

Its Executive Director, Brian Hallman, says the agreement has been finalised, license fees have been transmitted from his Association to the FFA, and vessels will be able to begin fishing in the treaty area pursuant to the 2016 agreement.

Mr Hallman says the American Tunaboat Association is pleased with recent turn of events, and that the impasse is over. He says his Association looks forward to participating in negotiations this year to re-structure the treaty, so that it can continue to be viable after 2016, and into the future.

The United States had pulled out of the US Pacific islands fisheries treaty in January. The move was presaged in December when the US government and its tuna fishing industry asked the FFA to take back 2,000 fishing days that the American fleet had requested as part of an earlier package of over 6,000 vessel days for 2016.

In December, several US-flagged fishing companies said they could not or would not pay their portion of the US$17 million quarterly payment due January 1, 2016.

RNZI

1 comment

  • Hufanga (Okusitino Mahina)
    Hufanga (Okusitino Mahina) Saturday, 05 March 2016 15:37 Comment Link

    While the return of the tuna fishing industry from the US to the Moana Pacific Islands nation states is more than welcome, the situation that it may not involve a transfer of competitive and compatible knowledge and skills, on the one hand, and technology and capital, on the other, is an unwelcome fact. But, a successful transfer necessarily requires rethinking and revamping our education systems in serious and reflective ways, where both the classical-critical education (that is, the quality or intellectual process of education) and vocational-technical education (that is, the utility or social use of education) are emphasised in the event, with the former logically taking precedence over the later, as well a consistent and well-thought-out shift from a service-led, consumer-based mode of economy to a creative-driven, producer-generated mode of economy, where the latter is made to take the lead over the former, in that logical order of precedence.

    Malo fau, 'ofa atu moe 'anau ma'u,
    Hufanga

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