The avoidance of unwanted catch and cooperation: the case of the British Columbia groundfish trawl fishery

Author:

Grønbæk L1,Lindroos M2,Munro G3ORCID,Pintassilgo P4ORCID,Turris B5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics, University of Southern Denmark , Odense, Denmark

2. Department of Economics and Business, University of Helsinki , Helsinki, Finland

3. Vancouver School of Economics, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, BC V6T 1L4, Canada

4. Faculty of Economics and CEFAGE, University of Algarve , Faro, Portugal

5. Executive Manager, Canadian Groundfish Research and Conservation Society; Pacific Fisheries Management Inc. , New Westminster, BC V3L 2X3, Canada

Abstract

Abstract This paper focuses on a particularly successful avoidance of unwanted catch of protected, endangered, and threatened (PET) species in the form of ecologically important sponge and coral, to be found off Canada's Pacific coast. The fishery causing the unwanted catch—the British Columbia groundfish trawl fishery. A campaign to protect the sponge/coral led by environmental NGOs (ENGOs) resulted in the industry's access to the key California market being threatened. For reasons explained, the national resource manager's ability to take effective direct action had become severely compromised. The groundfish trawl fishing industry responded to the economic threat with a bottom up approach to the unwanted catch problem, by negotiating a habitat agreement with a consortium of ENGOs, with the blessing and full support of the national resource manager. The agreement, now in its tenth year of operation, has proved to be a remarkable success in avoidance of unwanted catch. The paper argues that the success rests fundamentally upon the fact that the fishers have been and are playing a stand alone stable cooperative game, which has led them in turn to play stable cooperative games with both the national resource manager and the ENGO consortium. The paper analyses the factors leading to the stand alone stable cooperative fisher game, doing so by necessity through the lens of game theory.

Funder

FCT

Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

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