Management of North-East arctic cod : an age-structured, multi-fleet analysis

The North-East Arctic cod fishery is of economic and cultural importance. The stock is subject to joint management by Norway and Russia. Today’s stock management strategy is designed to achieve the maximum sustainable yield given the current selection pattern. The current selection pattern is largel...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bang, Rasmus Noss
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: SNF 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2639726
id ftnorgehandelshs:oai:openaccess.nhh.no:11250/2639726
record_format openpolar
spelling ftnorgehandelshs:oai:openaccess.nhh.no:11250/2639726 2023-05-15T14:30:22+02:00 Management of North-East arctic cod : an age-structured, multi-fleet analysis Bang, Rasmus Noss 2019-10 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2639726 eng eng SNF urn:isbn:978-82-491-1001-8 (printed version) urn:isbn:978-82-491-1002-5 (online version) urn:issn:0803-4036 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2639726 Report 2019 ftnorgehandelshs 2021-10-19T20:06:45Z The North-East Arctic cod fishery is of economic and cultural importance. The stock is subject to joint management by Norway and Russia. Today’s stock management strategy is designed to achieve the maximum sustainable yield given the current selection pattern. The current selection pattern is largely determined by the fleet-composition, i.e. the distribution of the total allowable catch in terms of shares. By use of an age-structured, multi-fleet, bioeconomic model, it is shown that the stock has biological potential that cannot be realized with today’s management. The same goes for the economic potential of the Norwegian part of the fishery. Biological gains in terms of an increase in the sustainable yield may be achieved by altering the overall selection pattern through changes in the fleet-composition. Economic gains in terms of an increase in the net present value of the Norwegian part of the fishery may be achieved by changing the fleet-composition and reducing the overall fishing pressure. Report Arctic cod Arctic NHH Brage Open institutional repository (Norwegian School of Economics) Arctic Norway
institution Open Polar
collection NHH Brage Open institutional repository (Norwegian School of Economics)
op_collection_id ftnorgehandelshs
language English
description The North-East Arctic cod fishery is of economic and cultural importance. The stock is subject to joint management by Norway and Russia. Today’s stock management strategy is designed to achieve the maximum sustainable yield given the current selection pattern. The current selection pattern is largely determined by the fleet-composition, i.e. the distribution of the total allowable catch in terms of shares. By use of an age-structured, multi-fleet, bioeconomic model, it is shown that the stock has biological potential that cannot be realized with today’s management. The same goes for the economic potential of the Norwegian part of the fishery. Biological gains in terms of an increase in the sustainable yield may be achieved by altering the overall selection pattern through changes in the fleet-composition. Economic gains in terms of an increase in the net present value of the Norwegian part of the fishery may be achieved by changing the fleet-composition and reducing the overall fishing pressure.
format Report
author Bang, Rasmus Noss
spellingShingle Bang, Rasmus Noss
Management of North-East arctic cod : an age-structured, multi-fleet analysis
author_facet Bang, Rasmus Noss
author_sort Bang, Rasmus Noss
title Management of North-East arctic cod : an age-structured, multi-fleet analysis
title_short Management of North-East arctic cod : an age-structured, multi-fleet analysis
title_full Management of North-East arctic cod : an age-structured, multi-fleet analysis
title_fullStr Management of North-East arctic cod : an age-structured, multi-fleet analysis
title_full_unstemmed Management of North-East arctic cod : an age-structured, multi-fleet analysis
title_sort management of north-east arctic cod : an age-structured, multi-fleet analysis
publisher SNF
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2639726
geographic Arctic
Norway
geographic_facet Arctic
Norway
genre Arctic cod
Arctic
genre_facet Arctic cod
Arctic
op_relation urn:isbn:978-82-491-1001-8 (printed version)
urn:isbn:978-82-491-1002-5 (online version)
urn:issn:0803-4036
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2639726
_version_ 1766304226028290048