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ESD REPORTING Presentation to ESD Workshops Dr Rick Fletcher

ESD REPORTING Presentation to ESD Workshops Dr Rick Fletcher. OUTLINE OF TALK. Why are we doing this? Brief Overall Description of National ESD Reporting Framework Details of each of the 4 steps Aquaculture Cross Fishery and Regional Planning. What is ESD?. NSESD (1992)

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ESD REPORTING Presentation to ESD Workshops Dr Rick Fletcher

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  1. ESD REPORTINGPresentation to ESD Workshops Dr Rick Fletcher

  2. OUTLINE OF TALK • Why are we doing this? • Brief Overall Description of NationalESD Reporting Framework • Details of each of the 4 steps • Aquaculture • Cross Fishery and Regional Planning

  3. What is ESD? NSESD (1992) “using, conserving and enhancing the community’s resources so that ecological processes, on which life depends, are maintained, and the total quality of life, now and in the future, can be increased” Incorporates the 5 major issues of interest: Target Species, Ecosystem, Social, Economic and Governance

  4. Why Not Just Environment?? • Natural resource management needs more than just having minimum standards for affected populations • The activity MUST produce some social or economic benefit or it is vandalism • Depending upon societal values - acceptable impacts can be from “not to be harvested” (e.g. dolphins) to “fully exploit” (e.g. prawns). • To effectively manage a fishery (and meet ESD Principles) requires integration of environmental, social and economic factors.

  5. Issues and Needs • Fisheries Legislative Requirements (all have ESD in their Acts in some form) • Other Government Requirements e.g. EPBC (Used to be Schedule 4). Various state-based agencies want environment issues addressed (EPA, Councils etc). • Market Leverage/Access Marine Stewardship Council • Develop one reporting process that gathers the information to meets most of these needs • Urgent need to respond to the EPBC requirements to enable exports past 2003

  6. ESD Measurement and Reporting • Many previous attempts have failed • One size does not fit all • Requires a process to systematically identify issues, develop operational objectives and then work out what indicators need to be measured. • The objectives and acceptable range needs to be developed with all stakeholders • Level of information presented needs to be appropriate to the issue

  7. Why Have a Framework? • Having a framework is NOT an alternative for undertaking other necessary actions • It puts all actions and issues into context • Without a framework it is too easy to conduct unnecessary work and/or miss working on the real issues • Helps determine what actions should be undertaken • Should maximise their benefits

  8. National ESD Framework • Began in March 2000 (after Geelong ESD Conference) • Project has used a stakeholder reference group to provide ongoing advice • An ESD reporting framework for wild capture was refined through 8 case studies & 2 workshops

  9. National ESD Framework • From this a “HOW TO GUIDE” was written to “operationalise” ESD for fisheries

  10. How does the National ESD Process Work? - Part 1 Identify specific issues for each fishery by adapting the set of generic component trees in a workshop fashion

  11. Administration Target Species Socio economic at 3 different levels External impacts both Natural and human induced By catch and protected species Habitat impacts Trophic Changes Separates ESD into 8 main components across 3 categories

  12. Why use generic component trees? • Likely issues identified were developed into a generic tree for each component of ESD • These generic trees are used as the starting point for all assessments • Enhances consistency of approach • Requires specification of what are NOT issues as much as determining what are issues. • Minimises ‘missing issues’ at first pass

  13. FIRST TASK • AGREE ON THE COMPONENT TREE STRUCTURE FOR THESE FISHERIES • YOU CAN ADD ANY ISSUE YOU THINK HAS NOT BEEN INCLUDED • WE DO NOT DEBATE THEIR PRIORITY - THIS IS DONE IN THE NEXT STAGE

  14. How does the process work?Part 2 • Often many issues are identified, their importance varies and not all will require full reports and explicit management • Conduct a Risk Assessment on each of the identified issues to determine appropriate level of response –again in a workshop environment

  15. Likelihood Negligible Minor Moderate Severe Major Catastrophic 0 1 2 3 4 5 Remote 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 Rare 2 0 2 4 6 8 10 Unlikely 3 0 3 6 9 12 15 Possible 4 0 4 8 12 16 20 Occasional 5 0 5 10 15 20 25 Likely 6 0 6 12 18 24 30 RISK ASSESSMENT Consequence We have developed five consequence tables specific to assessing issues related to fisheries

  16. RISK ASSESSMENT NO DIRECT MANAGEMENT NEEDED DIRECT MANAGEMENT IS NEEDED

  17. Reporting Process Part 3 Complete Suitably Detailed Reports on Each Issue • Can you justify that your management actions (or in inactions) are appropriate given the level of risk and the current level of knowledge available? • Is your current performance acceptable given the levels chosen?

  18. What specifically for this issue for this fishery do you want to achieve and WHY? PART 3 - Reporting THESE THREE ARE A PACKAGE • Rationale for inclusion (risk rating) • Operational Objectives (+Justification) • Indicator • Performance Measure (+Justification) • Data Requirements • Data Availability • Evaluation • Evaluation Reliability • Management Response (Current, Future and if Trigger is reached) • Summary of Actions and Conclusions • External Drivers These need to link directly to the objectives n

  19. How does the process work?Part 4 Complete Application using information in Component Reports

  20. Summary of ESD Framework Specific Reports Plus General Background Information= ESD STATUS REPORT Government Audits Other Stakeholders

  21. Comparison to other Models

  22. DETAILS ON COMPONENT TREESWild Capture

  23. Retained Species At some stage these SPECIES are wanted by some or all of the fishery - ie you do want to catch some

  24. Revised Rock Lobster Tree

  25. THREE BASIC CATEGORIES • Target/Major ByProduct • Species by itself • Minor Byproduct • Species is mostly taken in another fishery, that fishery will deal with the species explicitly and comprehensively • Other – nobody, including this fishery takes a significant (relevant to the stock) amount

  26. Non-Retained These SPECIES are NEVER wanted to be caught - if possible eradicate all from catch

  27. Non-RetainedRock Lobster

  28. THREE BASIC CATEGORIES • Major Non – Retained • Species by itself • Protected/Threatened • Species by itself • Minor Non-retained (group) • Group (minor - determined by a risk assessment for each species)

  29. Indirect Environmental issues

  30. Rock Lobster Environmental issues

  31. Indigenous Issues It was thought that there should be an explicit discussion on the impacts on indigenous groups

  32. COMMUNITY WELLBEING The types of communities range from the industry itself to small dependent communities to those that are not dependent

  33. NATIONAL WELLBEING The broadest community addressed is at the national level

  34. Governance These components address whether there are the appropriate mechanisms to actually achieve the objectives listed in the previous 7 trees.

  35. GENERAL OBJECTIVE To have acceptable levels of governance Is the management plan being effective? Is Catch or Effort remaining within acceptable limits Does the management plan have the 10 key elements? Is there effective compliance? Is there effective consultation and reporting?

  36. ESD Assessment Tools One of the initiatives of the ESD subprogram is the compilation of information on each of the major fisheries into an Assessment Manual to assist in the development of ESD reports and their assessment.

  37. Assessment Headings •  VULNERABILITY TO FISHING • BIOLOGICAL REFERENCE POINTS • Spawning Biomass • Lowest Level Reached • Max. Exploitation Rate • ECONOMIC REFERENCE POINTS • MSY/MEY

  38. Assessment Headings •  INDICATORS OF ABUNDANCE (Robustness) • Catch • Catch Rate • Independent Survey • Current Stock Size (Models) • Probability of meeting “target” • Mean Size • Recruit. Surveys

  39. Assessment Headings • MANAGEMENT RESPONSES (Effectiveness of tools) • Size Limits • Reproductive • Closures • Effort • Output • ECOSYSTEM • Impacts on Prey • Impacts on Predators

  40. Assessment Manual INDIVIDUAL FISHERY REPORTS

  41. Method Overall General Bycatch Listed Species Ghost Fishing Benthic Effects Discards/ Prov. Hand gathered LOW Nil NIL NIL NIL NEGL. Line LOW LOW LOW NIL LOW LOW Potting/ Trapping LOW LOW LOW- MOD MOD- HIGH LOW- MOD NEGL. Haul Nets LOW – MOD MOD LOW NEGL. LOW -MOD LOW Purse Seine LOW – MOD LOW LOW –HIGH NEGL. NEGL. LOW Longlines LOW-MOD LOW LOW-HIGH LOW NEGL. NEGL. Demersal Gillnets LOW MOD MOD LOW - MOD NEGL. LOW Prawn Trawl MOD- HIGH MOD –HIGH LOW – HIGH NIL MOD- HIGH MOD Fish trawl HIGH MOD –HIGH LOW –HIGH NIL HIGH LOW -MOD Dredge HIGH MOD LOW-MOD NIL HIGH HIGH

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