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At-sea observer program is ‘broken’ advocates say but electronic tools and AI could help | CBC News

At-sea observer program is ‘broken’ advocates say but electronic tools and AI could help | CBC News

By Moira DonovanCBC | Top Stories News

Nova Scotia John Couture from Oceans North installs a camera on a tuna boat that piloted an electronic monitoring system this fall.(Submitted by John Couture) A screenshot from the electronic monitoring system Oceans North piloted this year, which uses cameras and AI to monitor fishing activity.(Submitted by John Couture) Katie Schleit is the fisheries director for Oceans North.(Robert Short/CBC) At-sea observer program is ‘broken,’ advocates say, but electronic tools and AI could help Many Atlantic Canadian fisheries failing to meet targets for observer coverage Advocates say the observer program for Atlantic Canada’s fisheries is ‘broken,’ with many fisheries failing to meet required levels for monitoring by at-sea observers. The at-sea observer program has been plagued by labour shortages, particularly since the COVID-19 pandemic, meaning many fishing vessels are not carrying at-sea observers with them as frequently as required by Fisheries and Oceans Canada targets. Many fisheries are falling well below coverage targets, according to advocates and documents obtained by CBC News through access to information requests. Electronic tools exist to fill in the gaps, advocates say. In the meantime, without sufficient coverage, information needed to effectively manage stocks is lacking. “We've just reached a point that the system is broken,” said John Couture, senior fisheries adviser with the non-government organization Oceans North. “When you're told at a meeting that no fisheries in this region are meeting the targets ... well, we're basing decisions on data that we don't have.” At-sea observers help with monitoring, compliance The at-sea observer program exists to independently observe harvesters’ fishing activity at sea. Observers are responsible for monitoring interactions with bycatch, taking measurements of targeted catch (like fish length and weight), securing biological samples and recording information. For some fisheries, that information is the primary source of scientific data. This helps managers understand how much quota is remaining and what other species fisheries are interacting with, and maintains compliance, so that harvesters aren’t using the wrong nets or hooks, for instance. Documents obtained by the CBC show that as of 2024, some fisheries - like winter flounder, silver hake and inshore halibut - had observers less than one per cent of the time, if they had any at all. Coverage targets are set at five to 20 per cent, and in some cases 100 per cent , depending on the fishery. ‘We just haven’t had enough human observers’ Observer coverage is now provided by private companies. DFO regulates companies and sets targets, and fishing associations and individual fishermen pay for observers. Having observers is a licence condition in many fisheries. Initially, the program was run internally by DFO, but it was offloaded to industry in the mid-2000s. Katie Schleit, fisheries director with Oceans North, said even before the pandemic, some fisheries weren’t meeting their targets. But after the pandemic - which made at-sea observing especially difficult - the problems have only grown. “We just haven't had enough human observers to fulfil the basic needs.” Oceans North piloted an electronic monitoring system this year that uses...

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At-sea observer program is ‘broken’ advocates say but electronic tools and AI could help | CBC News | Read on Kindle | LibSpace