Catch–quota matching allowances balance economic and ecological targets in a fishery managed by individual transferable quota

Fishers with individual catch quota, but limited control over the mix of species caught, depend on trade and catch–quota balancing allowances to fully utilize their quota without discarding. However, these allowances can theoretically lead to overfishing if total allowable catches (TACs) are consist...

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Main Authors: Maartje Oostdijk, Conor Byrne, Gunnar Stefánsson, Maria J. Santos, Pamela J. Woods
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Tac
Online Access:http://www.pnas.org/content/117/40/24771.full
id ftrepec:oai:RePEc:nas:journl:v:117:y:2020:p:24771-24777
record_format openpolar
spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:nas:journl:v:117:y:2020:p:24771-24777 2024-04-14T08:08:56+00:00 Catch–quota matching allowances balance economic and ecological targets in a fishery managed by individual transferable quota Maartje Oostdijk Conor Byrne Gunnar Stefánsson Maria J. Santos Pamela J. Woods http://www.pnas.org/content/117/40/24771.full unknown http://www.pnas.org/content/117/40/24771.full article ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:36:38Z Fishers with individual catch quota, but limited control over the mix of species caught, depend on trade and catch–quota balancing allowances to fully utilize their quota without discarding. However, these allowances can theoretically lead to overfishing if total allowable catches (TACs) are consistently exceeded. This study investigates usage of balancing allowances by the Icelandic demersal fleet over 2001–2017, for over 1,900 vessels. When a vessel’s demersal catch exceeds owned and leased quota for a given species, the gap can be bridged by borrowing quota from the subsequent fishing period or transforming unutilized quota in other species, restricted by limits. Conversely, excess quota can be saved or transformed into quota for species where there is a shortfall. We found evidence that balancing behavior is frequently similar across the fleet. Transformations are consistent with indicators of a general quota shortage and potential for arbitrage caused by differences in conversion ratios used for transformation and lease prices. Larger companies contribute more to these patterns. Nevertheless, TAC overages are generally modest especially in recent years—key reasons appear to be the tightening of vessel transformation limits and the central role of Atlantic cod, which is the main target species but cannot be persistently overfished due to a specific prohibition on positive transformations into the species. These results show how the tailored design of the Icelandic catch–quota balancing system has helped in balancing economic and ecological goals of management. We suggest policy changes that could further reduce ecological risks, e.g., prioritizing between-year transfers over transformations. catch–quota balancing, fisheries management, incentives Article in Journal/Newspaper atlantic cod RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Tac ENVELOPE(-59.517,-59.517,-62.500,-62.500)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Fishers with individual catch quota, but limited control over the mix of species caught, depend on trade and catch–quota balancing allowances to fully utilize their quota without discarding. However, these allowances can theoretically lead to overfishing if total allowable catches (TACs) are consistently exceeded. This study investigates usage of balancing allowances by the Icelandic demersal fleet over 2001–2017, for over 1,900 vessels. When a vessel’s demersal catch exceeds owned and leased quota for a given species, the gap can be bridged by borrowing quota from the subsequent fishing period or transforming unutilized quota in other species, restricted by limits. Conversely, excess quota can be saved or transformed into quota for species where there is a shortfall. We found evidence that balancing behavior is frequently similar across the fleet. Transformations are consistent with indicators of a general quota shortage and potential for arbitrage caused by differences in conversion ratios used for transformation and lease prices. Larger companies contribute more to these patterns. Nevertheless, TAC overages are generally modest especially in recent years—key reasons appear to be the tightening of vessel transformation limits and the central role of Atlantic cod, which is the main target species but cannot be persistently overfished due to a specific prohibition on positive transformations into the species. These results show how the tailored design of the Icelandic catch–quota balancing system has helped in balancing economic and ecological goals of management. We suggest policy changes that could further reduce ecological risks, e.g., prioritizing between-year transfers over transformations. catch–quota balancing, fisheries management, incentives
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Maartje Oostdijk
Conor Byrne
Gunnar Stefánsson
Maria J. Santos
Pamela J. Woods
spellingShingle Maartje Oostdijk
Conor Byrne
Gunnar Stefánsson
Maria J. Santos
Pamela J. Woods
Catch–quota matching allowances balance economic and ecological targets in a fishery managed by individual transferable quota
author_facet Maartje Oostdijk
Conor Byrne
Gunnar Stefánsson
Maria J. Santos
Pamela J. Woods
author_sort Maartje Oostdijk
title Catch–quota matching allowances balance economic and ecological targets in a fishery managed by individual transferable quota
title_short Catch–quota matching allowances balance economic and ecological targets in a fishery managed by individual transferable quota
title_full Catch–quota matching allowances balance economic and ecological targets in a fishery managed by individual transferable quota
title_fullStr Catch–quota matching allowances balance economic and ecological targets in a fishery managed by individual transferable quota
title_full_unstemmed Catch–quota matching allowances balance economic and ecological targets in a fishery managed by individual transferable quota
title_sort catch–quota matching allowances balance economic and ecological targets in a fishery managed by individual transferable quota
url http://www.pnas.org/content/117/40/24771.full
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.517,-59.517,-62.500,-62.500)
geographic Tac
geographic_facet Tac
genre atlantic cod
genre_facet atlantic cod
op_relation http://www.pnas.org/content/117/40/24771.full
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