{"id":48370,"date":"2021-06-17T18:26:00","date_gmt":"2021-06-17T18:26:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dev6.blazedream.in\/ICSF\/samudra\/chilled-out"},"modified":"2021-08-23T05:03:05","modified_gmt":"2021-08-23T05:03:05","slug":"chilled-out","status":"publish","type":"samudra","link":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/samudra\/chilled-out\/","title":{"rendered":"Chilled out"},"content":{"rendered":"

Chile \/ SSF<\/p>\n

Chilled Out<\/strong><\/p>\n

Chile’s fisheries development model, which follows a neoliberal paradigm, is in danger of triggering a political, environmental and social crisis<\/strong><\/p>\n


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This article is by Juan Carlos C\u00e1rdenas<\/em> (jcc@ecoceanos.cl<\/a>), veterinarian and Executive Director, Centro Ecoc\u00e9anos, Chile, and Patricio Igor Melillanca<\/em> (patricio@ecoceanos.cl<\/a>), journalist and Director of Communications, Centro Ecoc\u00e9anos, Chile<\/p>\n


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Chile borders the southeast Pacific Ocean, one of the five most productive marine areas in the world. The country has 4,200 km of open coastline and 30,000 km of sheltered coastline, consisting of several islands clusters and the Patagonian fjords, next to the subAntarctic region. In addition to this, Chile’s territorial seas and exclusive economic zone cover 3.6 mn sq km, five times the size of the country’s mainland.<\/p>\n

All along this diverse coastline, there are 455 communities where 91,632 small-scale fishermen and women (77 per cent men and 23 per cent women) live and work, engaged in fisheries, aquaculture and seaweed harvesting, and shellfish gathering, with a total production of 1.5 mn tonnes per year.<\/p>\n

Chile is the world’s eighth largest fishing nation, with total landings reaching 3.8 mn tonnes per year. Of these, 1.2 mn come from industrial fisheries, 1.5 mn from small-scale fisheries, and 872,000 tonnes from aquaculture.<\/p>\n

This South American country is the second largest fishmeal producer, after Peru; the first largest exporter of seaweed for human consumption; the largest producer of farmed trout; and the second largest producer of farmed salmon, after Norway.<\/p>\n

Farmed salmonidae (introduced species of carnivorous fish) represent Chile’s second largest export, with a production of 895,000 tonnes worth US$4.361 bn in 2014.<\/p>\n

An experimental ground for savage neoliberal policies in the southeast Pacific Ocean<\/strong><\/p>\n

In the last 40 years, Chile has been an experimental ground for neoliberal policies. Eighty-three per cent of the national economy relies on exports of natural resources with low added value, the result of implementing the extraction-export system imposed by the military dictatorship since 1973. Subsequent democratic governments helped deepen and refine this destructive, undemocratic model.<\/p>\n

Privatization, sea grabbing and corruption stifle small-scale fisheries<\/strong><\/p>\n

Over four decades, both the military junta and subsequent democratic governments failed in their attempts to privatize small-scale fisheries, due to the strong and cohesive opposition displayed by artisanal fishermen, coastal communities, indigenous peoples and civil society organizations from 1985 to 2012.<\/p>\n

In 1998, after a series of failed privatization attempts, Eduardo Frei’s Christian Democrat government divided the National Confederation of Small-scale Fishermen (Confederaci\u00f3n Nacional de Pescadores Artesanales de Chile, CONAPACH) by creating a parallel organization, the Confederation of Small-scale Fishermen (Confederaci\u00f3n de Pescadores Artesanales de Chile, CONFEPACH) that supports free-market policies and agreements with industrial fisheries.<\/p>\n

Division in the Movement<\/strong><\/p>\n

The division of the small-scale fisheries movement led to a partial privatization of the sector for 10 years by setting up a system of individual, non-transferable fishing quotas, based on \u0093maximum catch limit per vessel owner (LMCA).<\/p>\n

Before the end of the LMCA system, political and business elites, together with CONAPACH and CONFEPACH, entered into a corrupt political agreement under the guise of an \u0093advisory board, created in 2011, which supported the Parliament to pass a fisheries privatization law that entered into force in 2013. In the framework of this agreement, small-scale vessel owners received, in return, fishing quotas worth US$34mn, transferred from the industrial sector.<\/p>\n

At the present time, the National Office of Economic Crimes has pressed charges of bribery, defrauding of the State, and illegal political funding against 17 fishing companies, two transnational corporations, four associations of fishing companies and 16 members of the Parliament. All of them, including a former small-scale fisheries leader, are currently facing trial in Court.<\/p>\n

Chile’s neoliberal fisheries and aquaculture system’s theoretical framework<\/strong><\/p>\n

The privatization process of coastal areas (in 2010) and fisheries (in 2013) is underpinned by a strategic agenda promoted by international financial institutions and multilateral organizations, aimed at imposing Chile’s neoliberal fisheries and aquaculture systems as the model for the future, especially for small-scale fisheries in Latin America and the Caribbean.<\/p>\n

The main characteristics of this orthodox model are:<\/p>\n