Filipino fisheries official to head asian women’s scientists group

PHILIPPINES: A Filipino has been elected chairman of the International Network of Women Engineers and Scientists-Asia Pacific Nation Network (Inwes-APNN), one of the most respected global organizations of women engineers and scientists.

 

Juana Tapel, an engineer with a PhD and assistant director of the Bureau of Agricultural and Fisheries Engineering (BAFE), was elected as the new chairman of the Inwes-APNN during the organization’s annual general assembly held at the Institution of Engineers Malaysia in Petaling Jaya, Malaysia on Oct. 14, 2022. BAFE is an agency under the Department of Agriculture.

 

She also received the highest number of votes in an online voting participated by Asia-Pacific nations representatives. Tapel is the very first Filipino to be voted to the position.

 

As the chairman of the Philippine Technological Council-Women Engineers Network for seven years, Tapel is the country’s official representative to Inwes-APNN, a platform for Asian women scientists and engineers to exchange information such as Asian women scientists’ organizations and policies, and the current technology situation in every member country.

As the fifth chairman of the organization, Tapel will succeed Ariunbolor Purvee of Mongolia when she starts her three-year term of office next year. Previous chairpersons of the organization were Hyang Sook Yoo of South Korea, Kayoko Sugahara of Japan and Chia-li Wu of Taiwan.

 

 

“For a three-year term, Tapel will lead the Inwes-APNN from 2023 to 2026. Dr. Tapel’s election is expected to boost the Philippines’ bid to host the International Conference of Women Engineers and Scientists (Icwes) in 2026,” BAFE said in a statement.

 

Established in 1964, Icwes is an international conference for engineers and scientists that takes place every three years in different countries around the world.

 

Meanwhile, Inwes has three other regional counterparts for Africa, Europe and Middle East-North Africa.

 

Source: www.manilatimes.net/

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Sardines catch in San Bernardino Strait in Samar in the Philippines plummeting since 2013

PHILIPPINES: Sardines, also called “tamban,” catch at the San Bernardino Strait in Northern Samar in ṭḥe Philippines has been decreasing since 2013.

 

Martha Cadano, the manager of the only sardine processor in Northern Samar, said the trend poses a challenge to the future of their business, Ken Matthew Sardines, which has 50 workers to sustain and only 500 bottles to produce.

 

The San Bernardino Strait connects the Samar Sea with the Philippine Sea, separating the Bicol Peninsula of Luzon from Samar Island.

 

It is also under Fisheries Management Area 7 (FMA) le d by the Bicol region. Other areas comprising FMA 7 are Sorsogon Bay, Ragay Gulf, Ticao-Burias Pass, Cariaga Bay, Magueda Bay, Irong-Irong Bay, and Samar Sea.

 

Cadano cited the decline of one of the 10 major fishery stocks in Northern Samar not only in its volume, but also in sizes, which they no longer needed to cut the fish in half during processing.

 

She added that the lack of an ice plant and cold storage facility also prompts farmers to sell their catch in Sorsogon.

 

“Since there are no storage facilities, we have to process our catch within a few hours and distribute the excess to the community for free,” she said, which means a loss for a small enterprise like them.

 

BFAR Eastern Visayas Assistant Regional Director Cylet Lluz said that although there is a National Sardines Management Plan signed by the Department of Agriculture (DA) aiming to address the alarming decline of the sardine stocks in the country, FMAs cannot implement a one size fits all policy.

Source: Manila Buletin

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Skipjack Tuna Fished By Purse Seine In The Indian Ocean By Anabac Enters The Evaluation Process Of The Fisheries Standard Of The MSC

SPAIN: The non-profit organization Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) announces that the National Association of Freezer Tuna Vessel Owners (ANABAC) has started the evaluation process to certify its catches of skipjack tuna in the Indian Ocean under the MSC Fisheries Standard. .

 

After almost a year of auditing process, in June 2021, ANABAC obtained MSC certification for its yellowfin tuna (Thunnus Albacares) fished in free schools in the Atlantic Ocean. This process followed all the steps of full assessment under the strict MSC Fisheries Standard, including peer review, site visit, the process of submitting claims by all interested parties and the various interim reports published in the MSC website.

 

Widely recognized as the world's most rigorous and credible extractive fisheries sustainability assessment process, the MSC Fisheries Standard certifies well-managed, sustainable fisheries and is based on three fundamental principles: healthy fish stocks; minimization of the impact on the marine environment as a whole; and an effective fisheries management system. ANABAC's certification will be carried out by the independent certifier Bureau Veritas for the three principles mentioned.

 

In the event that the evaluation is completed successfully, the skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis) caught by purse-seine gear and in all its modalities, both free school and on fish aggregating devices (FADs) may look the MSC sustainable fishing identification, the blue seal.

 

The fishery is made up of eight vessels, which are Izurdia, Doniene, Playa de Aritzatxu, Playa de Ris, Artza, Morne Blanc, Morn Seselwa and Playa de Anzoras, owned by the companies ATUNSA and PEVASA, four of which have a Spanish flag and another four are flagged to the Seychelles. The fishing zone corresponds to the entire Indian Ocean and, specifically, to FAO zones 51 and 57.

 

Currently, a total of 21 vessels are attached to this association, fishing mainly yellowfin tuna (yellow fin tuna) and skipjack tuna in the tropical waters of the Atlantic (from Mauritania to Angola) and Indian Oceans (from the eastern African coast to the Chagos Islands) both inside and outside the Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ) of the coastal countries, since tuna is a highly migratory species and is not permanently located in a given fishing ground.

 

“Following the first MSC certification of the Atlantic Ocean tuna free school fishery, obtained last year, the assessment of our Indian Ocean skipjack fishery is the natural step taken by ANABAC in its plan to certify under the Fisheries Standard MSC all its fisheries”. Borja Soroa, president of ANABAC.

 

“A year ago we celebrated the MSC certification for the Atlantic yellowfin tuna catches of the Anabac fleet. We are pleased that the association has now decided to assess its catches of skipjack tuna in the Indian Ocean by undergoing the independent and participatory assessment process of the MSC standard. We wish the member companies of ANABAC much success in the process”. Laura Rodríguez, MSC Program Director for Spain and Portugal.

Source: MSC

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