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April 2015

| Business World

111

compared to other target fish behaviour –

excludes them from the catch mechanically.

That’s reduced our halibut bycatch by quite

a bit.”

The other main challenge AKSC is working

on is reducing halibut mortality during the

sampling process. According to Anderson,

roughly 80 per cent of halibut die during

that stage.

“We’re trying to figure out a way to provide

accurate accounting of halibut bycatch and

get those halibut in the water sooner by sort-

ing them on deck,” he explained. “It’s impor-

tant to have protocols in place to get an accu-

rate catch counting, and we’re working with

an agency in figuring out how to do that and

get halibut back in the water.”

“There’s a lot of political pressure on all

groups to reduce halibut bycatch,” he contin-

ued. “This is an international issue because

Canada has a portion of the halibut resource

and the USA has a portion of the halibut

resource, and it becomes fairly politicized

rather quickly.”

The challenge, Anderson said, is that fisher-

men have made a lot of improvements to re-

duce halibut bycatch already. Many of them

feel like further incremental improvements

will be small, with the exception of deck

sorting – but even that comes with its own

specific challenges.