Sunday, December 16, 2012

Banning shark’s fin not the solution: experts

Banning shark’s fin not the solution: experts
Imposing bans on shark’s fin consumption will not ultimately address the threat of extinction they face, but a focus on encouraging sustainable fishing could, a few marine experts said on Thursday.

Though the views of the four-man panel at a seminar on the issue differed at various points, all of them — a member of a United Nations body on endangered species, a veteran shark researcher, an industry consultant and an animal rights activist — agreed that the threat of extinction hanging over sharks is a global problem that stems from the way fishing is carried out all over the world.

At the forum, which was organised by the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies after several grocery chains in Singapore said they would no longer offer shark’s fin products on their shelves, veterinarian Giam Choo-Hoo argued that it made more sense to eat shark’s fin soup than not.

A committee member of the UN Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), Giam said, “The truth is, 80 per cent of sharks are caught accidentally, so whether or not you eat shark’s fin is inconsequential — the sharks will still be caught.”

Citing statistics compiled from the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, Giam made a case for fisheries in developing countries, which catch about 70 per cent of the sharks that are picked up every year. They would, he added, by extension benefit more from the shark fishing industry than developed countries.

On the other end of the spectrum, Louis Ng, executive director of the Animal Concerns Research and Education Society (ACRES) and who has pushed for a boycott of shark’s fin products, said, “The consensus is really that it (the shark industry today) is unsustainable.”

Explaining his support for a ban, he said, “I think we need to remember that this is a profit-driven industry. If profits remain the same, change will not come.”

Ng added that shark fin suppliers needed to feel the pinch of a fall in consumer demand before they could realise the need to commit to trading only with sustainable fisheries.

Misleading campaigns

CITES committee member Giam Choo-Hoo argues the case for shark's fin consumption. (Yahoo! photo)

In his speech at the seminar, Giam maintained that sharks are not in danger of extinction as out of the more-than-400 species of sharks that exist, only one species — the sawfish — is counted among the animals listed in CITES’s Appendix I, which bars the capture, sale and trade of any or all of their parts in any country.

He added that just a further three others — the Great White, the Hammerhead and the Basking sharks — are listed in Appendix II, which still permits the capture, sale and trade of their meat, provided doing so does not impact the welfare of their species.

He also stressed that “live finnning”, a term that refers to the act of cutting off a shark’s fin from its body while it is still alive and tossing the rest of its body back into the sea, is frequently exploited by shark activists around the world in their campaigns when in reality, that practice is condemned in the fishing industry.

Shark industry expert and consultant Hank Jenkins followed up on Giam’s argument with at least five instances from campaigns by WildAid and Shark Angels, among others, where scientific findings were manipulated or plucked from the air by seemingly “malicious” international animal rights activist organisations.

He also highlighted instances where pictures were either taken and described out of context, or even artificially manipulated, in the case of an image of a finless hammerhead shark vertically suspended underwater, from a campaign led by WildAid.

Push for sustainable fishing
Shark experts Steve Oakley (standing) and Hank Jenkins (seated, right) stressed that the focus should not be so …

Jenkins also made it clear that he was opposed to a complete ban to the sale and consumption of shark’s fins, saying that such a move would not attain its desired impact.

“Banning the trade in shark fins will result in wastage of the resource… and will not substantially reduce the overall numbers of sharks caught globally,” he said. “There is little doubt that many shark fisheries are either fully or over-exploited. The problem will not be resolved by imposing trade bans or the use of shark fins without also banning the consumption of shark meat in Europe, North America and elsewhere.”

Alongside shark researcher Steve Oakley, who has worked with and studied sharks in countries all over the world, Jenkins maintained that the best way to prevent shark populations from going extinct is by practicing sustainable shark fishing.

Oakley raised some examples of sustainable fishing in countries such as the U.S., which include the establishment of commercial quotas (for the total number of sharks that can be caught for sale and trade of their parts), as well as imposing time and area closures, so that fishing boats spend fewer hours catching sharks.

Despite the opposition that Oakley, Jenkins and Giam have to stopping shark’s fin consumption, Ng stands firm in his belief that temporarily boycotting consumption of the product will help to trigger action on part of the authorities in Singapore.

“We’re not calling for a complete ban indefinitely, but we’re saying let’s look at the stats, let the shark populations recover, do some proper management and let’s open the trade again only when it is certified sustainable,” he said.

Jenkins and Oakley both conceded that there is little Singapore can do to directly address the problem of fishing practices — one that they both stressed is a global one, not simply Asia, developed nation or China-specific — since it does not engage in fishing directly.

However, Oakley recommended that one thing Singapore’s government agencies such as the Agri-food and Veterinary Authority can implement is nation-to-nation trade contracts that require countries trading in shark’s fins with Singapore to have certifiably sustainable fisheries.

“Being realistic, we are not going to stop shark fishing all around the world in every country,” he said. “What does make sense is to ensure that international trade is regulated and controlled… we need management, we need regulations, it needs to be sustainable.”

He noted that Singapore is the world’s second-largest trading country for sharks, and it is in that area that the country can take steps to indirectly help solve the global problem.

“It’s very easy for Singapore to have agreements with countries which feel that they can supply sharks and other products sustainably which Singapore can then trade to wherever wants to buy them,” he said.

“The keyword here is 'sustainable'… it’s much easier to do on a country-to-country level.”

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

In the soup

In the soup

 
 
Re: "Ban on shark fin in muddy waters," Dec. 3.

It has been a long time since I had shark soup and I cannot say how it tastes or even what part of the shark was in the soup. It was in Thailand, not China.

Ald. Brian Pincott's attempt Saturday to explain why he was championing a ban on shark fin soup in landlocked Calgary was unconvincing and uninspired. He would have been better off arguing that Calgary's Chinese community is overfishing the Great White North Soup Shark that lives in Glenmore reservoir.

What I witnessed at the Chinese Cultural Centre was a smug, patronizing and condescending alderman whose attitude to the Chinese community betrayed a pompous belief in himself and apparently the divine right of a Ward 11 alderman to be reelected time and again.

Gary Beaton, Calgary

City shark fin ban in muddy waters after Ontario ruling

City shark fin ban in muddy waters after Ontario ruling

CALGARY — Calgary’s ban on shark fins may be kept afloat, despite an Ontario court ruling that prevents Toronto from wiping the controversial Chinese soup ingredient off menus.

It was a rough weekend for the fin ban’s council supporters, who faced frustration at a Chinese community hearing and must now reconsider the Calgary bylaw’s legal validity.

But while an Ontario Superior Court judge ruled Toronto lacked the right to enact a shark fin bylaw, Calgary may have more power under Alberta’s Municipal Government Act, said local lawyer Chris Davis.

“It leaves it very broad as to what municipalities might be able to do,” said Davis, who specializes in municipal law for Jensen Davis Law.

“That is where we may be distinguishable from Ontario.”
He pointed to Calgary’s cabbie battle in 2004 as a precedent-setting case.

The Supreme Court of Canada backed the city’s ability to cap the number of licence plates issued to taxis. It ended an 18-year dispute over municipal regulation of the industry.

The Ontario ruling could have an impact here, according to Ald. Brian Pincott, who said city lawyers will closely examine the case.

However, Pincott noted the shark-fin bylaw was green-lighted before being rolled out in council chambers last July.

“Our lawyers said we could go ahead and do it,” he said Sunday.
The Ward 11 alderman also said he looked at anti-fin regulations in a dozen other places — including Toronto — prior to pushing for the ban.

Toronto and Calgary use similar terms in their bylaws to outlaw the possession, sale and consumption of shark fin.

Both also cite threats to the shark population, ecosystem and consumers’ health as grounds for banning the Asian delicacy.

However, the Toronto ban had more teeth, with scofflaws receiving a $100,000 fine for a third offence versus $3,000 in Calgary.

The practice of finning has come under fire from critics who decry cutting the flippers off sharks and dumping the fish back into the ocean still alive.

The federal government banned shark finning in Canadian waters in 1994, but still allows the product to be imported. Calgary’s bylaw, which would take effect in July 2013, passed a first reading in October.

However, council ordered Pincott and Ward 8 Ald. John Mar to consult the community before second reading in January.

About 100 people attended a town hall meeting at the Chinese Cultural Centre on the weekend to rally against the bylaw.

Many complained the city did not conduct a proper consultation — a point conceded by the alderman who first proposed the ban earlier this year.

“I realize that you were not consulted, and I should have,” Pincott told the crowd.

But that argument didn’t sway many in the crowd, including a recently formed advocacy group, the Coalition for Transparent and Accountable Governance.

Richard Poon, spokesman for the group, said city council has forgotten its role and responsibility and is over-reaching its mandate.

“Why is a municipal government spending resources on a global issue?” he wondered.

A bylaw banning shark fin soup in Calgary amounts to “legislative bullying,” he said, adding council’s motive may be based on something other than environmental concerns.
Another town hall has been planned for Dec. 14.

Ken Lee, president of the Chinese Merchants Association, warned that legal action could be taken if city council doesn’t follow Ontario’s lead.

“We are getting nowhere,” Lee said Sunday. “And legal action is a strong option.”

bweismiller@calgaryherald.com

Toronto councillors outraged after shark fin ban struck down

Toronto councillors outraged after shark fin ban struck down

Micah Luxen
Staff Reporter
186 Comments
 
Toronto councillors are expressing outrage and say they may appeal after the Ontario Superior Court overruled the city’s ban on shark fins.

“I think that decision is fundamentally flawed and fundamentally wrong,” Councillor Glenn De Baeremaeker said Saturday, reacting to Justice James Spence’s ruling Friday that a city bylaw banning shark fins fell outside the city’s jurisdiction.

De Baeremaeker, along with Councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam, was a proponent of the 2011 bylaw that ruled no person shall possess, sell or consume shark fin or shark fin food products within the city.
“There’s no right-thinking person in the city of Toronto who would think it’s acceptable to take an animal out of the ocean, slice off its fins and throw it back in the ocean, where it’s going to drown or bleed to death or be eaten by other animals.”

After city councillors voted in favour of the ban 38-4 in the fall of 2011, Chinese community and business leaders challenged the bylaw in court.

In their application to appeal, challengers said the bylaw is an insult to the Chinese community; fins are used as an ingredient in shark fin soup, a traditional Chinese delicacy, served at weddings or on other special occasions.

“The city has not banned, or even considered banning, any other food or clothing products enjoyed by any other ethnic groups, where the animals from which the food or skin or fur is obtained are raised or killed in ways that most residents of the city would consider painful and cruel if they were aware of it,” they wrote in their appeal.

In his ruling Friday, Spence agreed with four challengers — Barbara Chiu, Hughes Eng, Peter Tam, and Jacky Ma — who argued the bylaw is constitutionally invalid because the municipality lacks the authority to protect national resources that never come within provincial waters, such as sharks.
John Leung, co-chair of the Fair and Responsible Governance Alliance, who spoke on behalf of the challengers, said he’s pleased with the court decision. “City councillors should focus on the well-being and interests of the city, so they would not waste the city’s resources and the taxpayers’ money.”

De Baeremaeker said he believes Toronto has every right to pass legislation to stop animal cruelty and to ban products from the city.

“We live in a global village. What we do in Toronto impacts the entire world. If we use ivory for our jewelry and piano keys, elephants in Africa get slaughtered — it’s very simple to understand the connection between our actions here and what happens globally.”

Wong-Tam said the city will review its options.
“That includes carefully vetting the ruling to determine our next course of action, and we should not rule out an appeal,” said Wong-Tam.

Sonny Liu, manager of Kyu Shon Hong, a store that sells Chinese food products on Dundas St. W., said Saturday he’s glad the market has opened up.

“Not just the store is happy, but other people are happy as well,” Liu said through a translator. “To us, it’s not that important, but to other people it makes a big impact.”

When the ban was in effect, anyone caught selling, consuming or possessing shark fin would be charged $5,000 for a first offence, $25,000 for a second, and $100,000 for additional offences.
Major cities across Canada, including North Vancouver and Calgary, have banned shark fin products, to protect the species.

Shark finning, the act of removing the fins from sharks and discarding the rest of the carcass, has been prohibited in Canada since 1994, but importing fins from other regions without regulations is permitted.

According to a letter from the office of the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, submitted as a court document, only a few shark species are harvested in Canada, including spiny dogfish, porbeagle shark, shortfin mako shark and blue shark. The letter says these harvests are carefully managed, based on the best scientific advice, and they allow Fisheries and Oceans Canada to monitor shark populations in order to ensure their conservation.

Shark fins are usually sold in dried or frozen form. They are virtually flavourless, but add texture to soup.

Liu says shark fins are normally sold around Chinese New Year.

“People don’t buy it [year round] since the cost is really high.” A family, he said, would eat a pound to a pound and a half, at $100 a pound, in a sitting. In China, fins sell for up to $1,300 each.
Ninety-five per cent of harvested shark fin is consumed in China. In July, China banned shark fin soup from government banquets, but the rule could take up to three years to take effect.
WildAid preservation group estimates 73 million sharks are killed every year for shark fin soup.

According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, one-third of all shark species are threatened with extinction.

Calgary City Hall Alderman Exposed by CTAG

Calgary City Hall Alderman Exposed by CTAG

Yesterday I had the pleasure of attending an information session at the Chinese Culture Center in Calgary  hosted by CTAG (Coalition For Transparent and Accountable Governance) to hear the pros and cons of having a shark fin ban in Calgary. I was surprised to see the auditorium full of concerned Calgarians wondering why the City Council did not  consult them prior to the first reading and passage of the bill last month. The message that really stood out from the crowd was not only did the two City Alderman, John Mar and Brian Pincott, not seem to know any facts about shark fishing they really didn’t seem to understand that they cannot use bully tactic and tax payer’s money to pursue an agenda that has little or no bearing on city issues which they were elected for. The few facts that Alderman Pincott threw our were so extremely skewed , that when confronted  were indefensible. When Pincott said that over 70 million sharks were killed each year , there was no mention on how many are fished for food or fished just for the shark fin. Also in the scientific study that was quoted back to him, the scientific community really doesn’t know how many sharks are fished each year, they can only estimate between 26 million to 70 million. It’s clear that Mr Pincott is only quoting the highest numbers to benefit his own agenda and not  giving the public the real balanced facts so they can understand the issue .

Its was very disturbing hearing politicians like Alderman Mar and  Pincott trying to defend their position with innuendo and rhetoric. Not only did they not have any real facts on why they want to have Calgary ban shark fishing, but they had no idea on the cost to the taxpayer to police the ban. Alderman Pincott just ignored this important question by saying it will be looked into later. Completely irresponsible and ill thought out.

Mar and Pincott also seem to ignore the legal sustainable shark fishing industry in BC supported by the Suzuki Foundation. There is nothing wrong with fishing any sustainable seafood whether it be the spotted shrimp or shark. It’s a mystery as to why these two Alderman think they know more than the Suzuki Foundation on this issue and are dragging Calgary taxpayers into an expensive ban while the federal government has already banned shark finning in 1996 plus the Ontario court  just yesterday overturned the Toronto shark finning bylaw. 

By far the most disturbing comment  by Alderman Pincott was when he blamed the federal government for not doing enough to protect the shark. This remark suggests they have other motives for getting involved in a federal jurisdiction. Do they really care about the shark or is this just a ruse to develop an issue , again on our tax dollars, to slam the Federal Conservative government. The motives for this ban have clearly become very suspicious.

Lucky for the taxpayer, over the next few weeks there will be more information sessions to expose this ridiculous ban and attack on our personal freedom to choose what legal food we like to eat. There has already been close to 6000 signature on a petition to stop this ban in just a few weeks. Now that the citizens of Calgary realize how they are being bullied and their right to choose legal products is being strip by these Alderman without properly being consulted,  we will most likely see these Alderman running for the door blaming each other for this stupid and very dubious bylaw.

Please comment below or email me direct at ALBERTASOAPBOX@gmail.com

Toronto court ruling could sink Calgary's shark fin ban: Alderman

Toronto court ruling could sink Calgary's shark fin ban: Alderman

The gutting of a Toronto shark fin ban might have taken a fatal bite out of a Calgary bid to prohibit the Asian delicacy, a city alderman said Saturday.

On Friday, an Ontario Supreme Court judge struck down the Toronto measure, ruling it was outside that city’s jurisdiction.

It’s a decision that might harpoon Calgary’s bid to pass a similar bylaw next month, said Ald. Druh Farrell, who supports the ban.

“We may have to focus on education on the impacts of shark-finning and do a better job of explaining why council supported this ban ,” said Farrell, adding the ruling is hardly decisive in the national debate.

“It’s an important issue that’s not going to go away because of what happened in Toronto.”
Just before a previously-planned town hall meeting Saturday on the issue in Calgary’s Chinatown, Ken Lee, an opponent of the bylaw, said if city council ignores the Ontario ruling, he and his colleagues will launch legal action to stop it.

“As the judge clearly stated, it’s out of their jurisdiction and we hope city councillors will take note of that,” said Lee, a member of the Calgary Chinese Merchants’ Association.

“A lawsuit would cost a lot and merchants also believe that law would spend our tax money and be a waste of resources.”

He also dubbed the bylaw toothless, adding shark fin soup isn’t a popular dish in Calgary restaurants anyway.

“It’s unenforceable and would bring no real benefit to Calgarians ... it’d just cause social tensions — Calgarians will be pointing fingers,” said Lee.

Ald. Brian Pincott, who’s pushed for the bylaw, said council will wait to see how city lawyers view the Ontario ruling.

And he said the court decision could have a silver lining in forcing the federal government to deal with issue, of which their refusal to do has landed the issue into the laps of municipalities.

“It just increases the pressure on the federal government, which needs to step up and do something about this,” he said.

“You have a group of cities across the country showing leadership on this, it’s a concern for Canadians from end to end.”

Pincott said he believes there are at least 30 Calgary restaurants that serve the dish, which can cost about $200 a bowl.

But he said council’s voting on the issue and the ongoing discussion has lowered consumption of the soup, which endangers sharks’ survivability.

“Anytime anyone knows anything about shark-finning, they’ll be making a choice not to eat it,” said Pincott.

bill.kaufmnann@sunmedia.ca
On Twitter: @SUNBillKaufmann

Shark fin timeline:
• 2008 report states 20% of shark species are critically endangered
• 2011: The European Commission proposes a ban on shark finning, which removes the fin while discarding the rest of the fish, in EU waters on EU-registered vessels world-wide
• July 16, 2012: Calgary City Council votes 13-2 to draft a bylaw banning shark fin possession or use.
• Sept. 1:Toronto’s shark fin ban goes into effect.
• Oct. 15: council passes first reading of the bylaw to prohibit shark fins in Calgary
• November, 2012: European Parliament backs a blanket ban on shark finning
• Nov. 30: Ontario Superior Court quashes Toronto shark fin prohibition, ruling it’s outside that city’s jurisdiction
• Dec. 1: Public hearing on the issue is held in Calgary’s Chinatown; opponents of ban say they’ll sue city if bylaw is pursued

Town Hall Meeting Invitation