Fish Focus

CANADA LAUNCHES NEW ‘GHOST GEAR’ REPORTING SYSTEM

Canada launches new ‘ghost gear’ reporting system. The Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, the Honourable Bernadette Jordan, has announced a new online system that makes it easier for commercial harvesters to report their lost fishing gear. The new Fishing Gear Reporting System allows commercial harvesters to conveniently input a description of their lost gear, the cause of loss, and its location from any online device.

All commercial harvesters in Canada are required to report their lost fishing gear to Fisheries and Oceans Canada. This reporting helps the Department and other partners locate and remove lost gear from our waters and, in many cases, return the gear to its rightful owner.

The Fishing Gear Reporting System was developed under the Ghost Gear Fund, and will provide Fisheries and Oceans Canada with more accurate and timely data on areas where gear-loss is most frequent, as well as the most common causes of gear loss. This information will help the Department to better target areas for ghost gear retrieval activities and find solutions to help prevent gear-loss in the future.

Bernadette Jordan, Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, said:

“Canada is a recognised, world-leader in the fight against marine pollution, and Canadian harvesters have been instrumental in our success to date. Not only will the Fishing Gear Reporting System make it easier for harvesters to be part of the solution, it will help them recover their valuable gear. This is good for industry and good for our environment.”

Joel Baziuk, Associate Director, Global Ghost Gear Initiative, said:

“Canada’s new Fishing Gear Reporting system further solidifies Canada as a global leader in finding solutions to ghost gear. Further complementing their Ghost Gear Fund and the crucial work it has facilitated both domestically and internationally, this new online reporting system will help harvesters be part of a holistic set of solutions designed to help the economy, coastal communities, marine life of all kinds and the environment in general. Implementing a system like this is a key recommendation of the newly revised GGGI Best Practice Framework for the Management of Fishing Gear, and we hope that other countries will follow this example and develop similar systems in the months and years to come.”

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