Joint Standing Committee on Treaties
TERMS OF REFERENCE
The Joint Standing Committee on Treaties was formed in the 38th Parliament
on 17 June 1996. The Committee's Resolution of Appointment allows the
Committee to inquire into and report upon:
- matters arising from treaties and related National Interest Analyses
and proposed treaty actions presented or deemed to be presented to the
Parliament;
- any question relating to a treaty or other international instrument,
whether or not negotiated to completion, referred to the committee by:
(i) either House of the Parliament, or (ii) a Minister; and
- such other matters as may be referred to the committee by the Minister
for Foreign Affairs and on such conditions as the Minister may prescribe.
Pursuant to these terms of reference the Committee resolved to inquire
into the Subsidiary Agreement between the Government of Australia and
the Government of Japan concerning Long-line Tuna Fishing 1996 and the
Agreement for the Establishment of the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS
38th Parliament
Chair |
Mr W L Taylor MP (LP, QLD) |
Deputy Chair |
Mr R B McClelland MP (ALP, NSW) |
Members |
Senator E Abetz (LP, TAS) |
|
Senator V W Bourne (DEM, NSW) |
|
Senator K Carr (ALP, VIC) |
|
Senator K Denman (ALP, TAS) |
|
Senator C M Ellison (LP, WA) |
|
Senator B J Neal (ALP, NSW) |
|
Senator W G O'Chee (NP, QLD) |
|
Hon D G H Adams MP (ALP, TAS) |
|
Mr K J Bartlett MP (LP, NSW) |
|
Mr L D T Ferguson MP (ALP, NSW) |
|
Mr G D Hardgrave MP (LP, QLD) |
|
Mr A C Smith MP (LP, QLD) |
|
Mr W E Truss MP (NP, QLD) |
|
Mr C W Tuckey MP (LP, WA)
|
- Committee Secretary
- Mr Peter Stephens
- Principal Research Officer
- Ms Cheryl Scarlett
- Research Officer
- Mr Bob Morris
-
- Principal Research Officer
- Mr Patrick Regan
- Executive Assistants
- Ms Helen Collins
- Ms Sophia Konti
- Mr Peter McLay
-
CONDUCT OF THE INQUIRY
The inquiry was advertised nationally on 20 July 1996. The Committee
received 45 submissions and 18 supplementary submissions for the Inquiry
into the Subsidiary Agreement between the Government of Japan and the
Government of Australia concerning Long-line Tuna Fishing 1996, which
are listed in Appendix 1. In relation to the Agreement on the Establishment
of the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission, the Committee received 9 submissions
which are listed in Appendix 2.
The Committee examined 56 witnesses at 8 public hearings representing
37 individuals or organisations. These are listed in Appendix 4.
During the Inquiry the Committee held public hearings in Canberra
on 29 August, 9 and 16 September and 10 and 15 October 1996, Hobart
on 5 September, in Perth on 26 September and Port Lincoln and Adelaide
on 27 September 1996. While visiting Port Lincoln the Committee inspected
the southern bluefin tuna farms and the tuna cannery.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The Committee wishes to thank all those who participated in the Inquiry
by appearing as witnesses, providing written submissions and assisting
with the arrangements for Committee meetings and inspections. The Committee
is grateful for the interest shown and the co- operation and the advice
provided.
Although the Committee was not able to take oral evidence from everyone
who provided submissions or to cite all submissions in the report, the
Committee considered all the information provided in determining the conclusions
in the report.
ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
ABARE Australian Bureau of Agricultural & Resource Economics
AFMA Australian Fisheries Management Authority
AFZ Australian fishing zone
AFZIS Australian Fishing Zone Information System
AMOU Australian Maritime Officers Union
ANCA Australian Nature Conservation Agency
ANSA Australian National Sportfishing Association
BRS Bureau of Resource Sciences
CCSBT Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna
CITES Convention for the International Trade in Endangered Species
of Wild Flora and Fauna
CPUE Catch per unit for effort
CSIRO Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Reaearch Organisation
DFAT Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
DPIE Department of Primary Industries and Energy
ECTF East Coast Tuna Fishery
ECTUNAMAC East Coast Tuna Management Advisory Committee
EEZ EIS EPA 200 nautical mile Exclusive Economic Zone Environmental
Impact Statement Environment Protection Agency
ESD ESP Act Ecologically Sustainable Development Endangered Species
Protection Act 1992
FAO Food and Agriculture Organization of the Uni
FEM Fisheries Ecosystem Management
FFA Forum Fisheries Agency
FRRF Fisheries Resources & Research Fund
GFAA Game Fishing Association of Australia
GPS ICCAT IOTC Global Positioning System International Commission
for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas Indian Ocean Tuna Commission
ITQ IUCN Individual Transferable Quota International Union for Conservation
of Nature
MAC Management Advisory Committee
MARPOL International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from
Ships
MOU Memorandum of Understanding
MSY Maximum Sustainable Yield
NFA National Food Authority
NIA National Interest Analysis
NSW New South Wales
NT Northern Territory
NZ New Zealand
OCS Offshore Constitutional Settlement
PNG Papua New Guinea
RTMP Real Time Monitoring Program
SBT Southern Bluefin Tuna
SPC TUNAMAC South Pacific Commission Tuna Management Advisory Committee
UNCED United Nations Conference on the Environment
UNCLOS VMS United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea Vessel
Monitoring System
VPA Virtual Population Analysis
SUMMARY
This report deals with the Subsiduary Agreement between the Government
of Australia and the Government of Japan Concerning Japanese Tuna Long-line
Fishing 1996 and the Agreement for the Establishment of the Indian Ocean
Tuna Commission.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The Joint Standing Committee on Treaties recommends that:
Bilateral arrangements
Recommendation 1:
the Commonwealth Government, in consultation with
the relevant States ensures that restrictions placed on either bilateral
vessels or Joint Venture vessels cannot be circumvented by interchange
between such arrangements (Paragraph 2.33). |
Recommendation 2:
the Commonwealth Government reviews the existing arrangements
for potential foreign ownership of fishing licences within the Exclusive
Economic Zone or Joint Venture arrangements which may jeopardise
the potential to manage fish stocks in the Exclusive Economic Zone
(Paragraph 2.34). |
Duration of subsidiary agreement
Recommendation 3:
the subsidiary agreement on long-line tuna fishing
with Japan be for a timeframe of at least two years (Paragraph 2.67).
|
Certificate system
Recommendation 4:
the Commonwealth Government raises the issue of the
introduction of a certificate system for southern bluefin tuna within
the Convention for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna and
the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (Paragraph 2.92). |
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission
Recommendation 5:
the Commonwealth Government:
| (a) |
notes Western Australia's particular interest in the
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission; and |
| (b) |
facilitates their participation in the delegation to
and any consultations relating to the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission
where possible (Paragraph 2.104). |
|
Tasmanian waters
Recommendation 6:
Australia deposits an Instrument of Acceptance for
the Agreement to Establish the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission on or
before 2 December 1996 (Paragraph 2.112). |
Recommendation 7:
the Commonwealth Government undertakes discussions
with the Government of Japan to resolve the communication difficulties
between the two fleets (Paragraph 3.41). |
Recommendation 8:
the Commonwealth Government creates, as a matter
of national consistency, an exclusion zone for the Bilateral and
Joint Venture Japanese long-line fishing vessels around Tasmania
of 50 nautical miles (Paragraph 3.46). |
Recreational and game fisheries
Recommendation 9:
the Commonwealth Government undertakes a review
of the Fisheries Management Act 1991 to determine if amendments
are necessary to facilitate the management of all Australian fisheries
to enable the recreational and game fishing industry to be treated
as a commercial activity with particular reference to achieving
optimum utilisation of the resource (Paragraph 3.60). |
Recommendation10:
the Commonwealth Government undertakes a full assessment
of the relative values of the recreational, game and long-line fisheries
and their compatibility as a basis for determining the most appropriate
management arrangements for the fishery and the degree of access
to be allocated to each sector (Paragraph 3.60). |
Recommendation 11:
the Commonwealth Government requires all Japanese
vessels fishing in the Exclusive Economic Zone cut free all marlin
(alive or dead) without removal from the ocean (Paragraph 3.75). |
Recommendation 12:
the Commonwealth Government undertakes a review
of the existing tuna fishing technology to determine if modifications
could be made to reduce the bycatch of non-target species (Paragraph
3.77). |
Port Access
Recommendation 13:
the separation of port access from the subsidiary
agreement but making port access subject to the continuation of
Japan's membership of the Convention for the Conservation of Southern
Bluefin Tuna and participation in the Commission for the Conservation
of Southern Bluefin Tuna (Paragraph 4.32).Environmental issues |
Environment issues
Recommendation 14:
the Commonwealth Government formalises a process
in which management plans relating to international fishing agreements
require a specific written clearance from the Environment Protection
Agency if they have significant potential environmental impacts
(Paragraph 5.7). |
Recommendation 15:
the Minister responsible for fisheries requests
the Department of Primary Industries and Energy to provide all relevant
information to the appropriate Commonwealth environment agencies
for consideration of issues pertaining to the marine ecosystem (Paragraph
5.9). |
Recommendation 16:
the Commonwealth Government reviews, as a matter
of urgency, Commonwealth legislation to ensure that the nomination
for the listing of fish as endangered or threatened is based on
merit and not impeded by anomalies in the wording of the legislation
or administrative procedures (Paragraph 5.20). |
Recommendation 17:
the Commonwealth Government requests that State
and Territory governments review, as a matter of urgency, their
legislation to ensure that the nominations for the listing of fish
as endangered or threatened is based on merit and not impeded by
anomalies in the wording of their relevant legislation or administrative
procedures (Paragraph 5.25). |
Recommendation 18:
a specialist observer training program be introduced
with additional emphasis on seabird research, the collection of
data on seabird bycatch and the effectiveness of seabird bycatch
mitigation methods (Paragraph 5.56). |
Recommendation 19:
the Commonwealth Government produces an "easy to
use guide" to the identification of seabirds which is to be issued
to Japanese vessels including Joint Venture vessels at the time
of the pre fishing inspection (Paragraph 5.56). |
Recommendation 20:
the Commonwealth Government expedites research into
eliminating bird bycatch as a matter of priority (Paragraph 5.76).
|
Recommendation 21:
the Commonwealth Government formally invites representatives
from Japan and New Zealand to participate in the development of
the Threat Abatement Plan (Paragraph 5.78) |
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