Sharing the herring : fish migrations, strategic advantage, and climate change
This paper analyzes the strategic options of Norway and other countries for which the stock of Norwegian spring spawning herring may be accessible. A cooperative solution would make all parties better off. In a cooperative solution Norway must obtain a relatively large share of the total catch quota...
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ftnorgehandelshs:oai:openaccess.nhh.no:11250/166434 2023-05-15T17:41:22+02:00 Sharing the herring : fish migrations, strategic advantage, and climate change Hannesson, Rögnvaldur 2004-06 73954 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/166434 eng eng SNF/Centre for Fisheries Economics Working paper 2004:27 Discussion paper 2004:8 urn:issn:1503-2140 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/166434 Working paper 2004 ftnorgehandelshs 2021-10-19T20:05:50Z This paper analyzes the strategic options of Norway and other countries for which the stock of Norwegian spring spawning herring may be accessible. A cooperative solution would make all parties better off. In a cooperative solution Norway must obtain a relatively large share of the total catch quota, because of her strategic advantage. The critical share to be offered to Norway does not have anything to do with the zonal attachment of the stock, interpreted as the share of the stock within the Norwegian economic zone. A rise in the temperature in the Northeast Atlantic could mean a larger carrying capacity for the stock and more extensive migration. This in turn would mean a less strong attachment of the stock to the Norwegian economic zone, strengthening the bargaining position of other parties than Norway. Report Northeast Atlantic NHH Brage Open institutional repository (Norwegian School of Economics) Norway |
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Open Polar |
collection |
NHH Brage Open institutional repository (Norwegian School of Economics) |
op_collection_id |
ftnorgehandelshs |
language |
English |
description |
This paper analyzes the strategic options of Norway and other countries for which the stock of Norwegian spring spawning herring may be accessible. A cooperative solution would make all parties better off. In a cooperative solution Norway must obtain a relatively large share of the total catch quota, because of her strategic advantage. The critical share to be offered to Norway does not have anything to do with the zonal attachment of the stock, interpreted as the share of the stock within the Norwegian economic zone. A rise in the temperature in the Northeast Atlantic could mean a larger carrying capacity for the stock and more extensive migration. This in turn would mean a less strong attachment of the stock to the Norwegian economic zone, strengthening the bargaining position of other parties than Norway. |
format |
Report |
author |
Hannesson, Rögnvaldur |
spellingShingle |
Hannesson, Rögnvaldur Sharing the herring : fish migrations, strategic advantage, and climate change |
author_facet |
Hannesson, Rögnvaldur |
author_sort |
Hannesson, Rögnvaldur |
title |
Sharing the herring : fish migrations, strategic advantage, and climate change |
title_short |
Sharing the herring : fish migrations, strategic advantage, and climate change |
title_full |
Sharing the herring : fish migrations, strategic advantage, and climate change |
title_fullStr |
Sharing the herring : fish migrations, strategic advantage, and climate change |
title_full_unstemmed |
Sharing the herring : fish migrations, strategic advantage, and climate change |
title_sort |
sharing the herring : fish migrations, strategic advantage, and climate change |
publisher |
SNF/Centre for Fisheries Economics |
publishDate |
2004 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/166434 |
geographic |
Norway |
geographic_facet |
Norway |
genre |
Northeast Atlantic |
genre_facet |
Northeast Atlantic |
op_relation |
Working paper 2004:27 Discussion paper 2004:8 urn:issn:1503-2140 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/166434 |
_version_ |
1766142884249075712 |