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Turn the Boat AroundWorking with the fishing industry, Orri Vigfússon protects North Atlantic salmon25 Apr 2007
Orri Vigfússon.
Photo: Goldman Environmental Prize.
Vigfússon hopes he and his allies will soon bring an end to salmon fishing in the North Atlantic, and he continues to recruit support from anglers and fishing communities on both sides of the pond. "Every year I have to come up with new creative ideas for how to raise money, through receptions and dinners and so on, but it's become fun," he says. Vigfússon, 64, was awarded one of six 2007 Goldman Environmental Prizes at a ceremony in San Francisco on April 23. He spoke to Grist from San Francisco.
Harboring hopes for the future.
Photo: Golli
I come from a herring family, so I know quite a bit about the background of fishing -- we were always thinking about the market price and the latest technology. And my family had a part in the overfishing of the herring stocks in the 1960s, so we had to stop fishing for herring for many years. The problem with all the world's fisheries is that we're killing too many fish for too long -- that's the essence of it.
So I set up the North Atlantic Salmon Fund. We recognized that the commercial fishers have the historic right to exploit the salmon, and decided that we needed to compensate them fairly -- and not just fairly, but generously. We don't believe in government resolutions. We decided that we needed to have firm commercial conservation agreements, because once you have those sorts of agreements, the industry really respects them. If they don't, if there's foul play, then no one would get paid. So those commercial conservation agreements are very, very important -- I'd like to see them used to manage fisheries all over the world.
It's important that you work with them, and help them develop their own ideas. Sometimes it's been difficult to get them to agree to relinquish their rights, so I say, "OK, if you don't want to do it in perpetuity, let's do it for two or three years and see what happens." So of course they don't want to be idle, they are looking around, and if they see an opportunity, they say, "OK, let's go!" I always emphasize that these guys must be compensated generously. I now have between 2,500 and 3,000 agreements with netmen, and I want them to stay on being happy forever.
Goldman Prizewinners
Meet the winners of the 2007 Goldman Environmental Prize:
Hammerskjoeld Simwinga of Zambia
Ts. Munkhbayar of Mongolia
Willie Corduff of Ireland
Orri Vigfússon of Iceland
Sophia Rabliauskas of Canada
Julio Cusurichi Palacios of Peru I'm hoping that [once we end salmon fishing in the North Atlantic], my organization will then turn to more in-river stuff, helping to build up stocks. We encourage all the sportfishers to practice catch and release to help increase the stocks of the rivers. So it's not only buying up the nets, it's also catch and release, and improving the in-river habitat. I'll probably do that for the rest of my life.
Catch and release, of course.
Photo: R. Randolph Ashton
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