4.6 Article

Managing weather & fishing safety: Marine meteorology and fishing decision-making from a governance and safety perspective

期刊

MARINE POLICY
卷 142, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpol.2022.105120

关键词

Meteorology; Fisheries; Occupational health and safety; Governance

资金

  1. Ocean Frontier Institute
  2. Canada First Research Excellence Fund [20181832, 20200928]
  3. Marine Environmental Observation Prediction and Response (MEOPAR) Networks of Centres of Excellence (NCE) [20150101]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Weather is a crucial factor affecting occupational health and safety in the fishing sector, but it is rarely considered from a governance perspective. This study investigates the weather/fishing safety governance ecosystem in Atlantic Canada, examining existing policies and the challenges they face. The findings highlight that current governance efforts primarily focus on risk communication and training, although weather is just one of many factors influencing fisher decisions. Other critical safety factors are shaped by different agencies and policies that do not traditionally consider weather or safety. Therefore, integrating meteorological and health and safety perspectives into fisheries management could help mitigate the impact of weather on fishers' decisions.
Weather is a key factor influencing occupational health and safety (OHS) in the fishing sector, and this relationship is the subject of a growing body of research. However, the issue is rarely considered through a governance lens. Drawing from a larger study of weather and fishing safety in Atlantic Canada, the current paper examines a regional weather/fishing safety governance ecosystem. Using insights from actors (meteorologists; professional fishers) and a review of relevant policy literature, we articulate existing policies that attempt to directly address weather concerns while exploring key challenges facing these efforts. Findings emphasize that governance efforts to mitigate weather-driven fishing incidents typically focus on either shaping risk communication (e.g. public marine forecasts), or enhancing meteorological capacity among fishers through training requirements. While these efforts serve to improve awareness and decision-making capacity, weather remains only one of many factors influencing fisher decisions. Other critical safety factors (fishing access; inter-fisher competition) are shaped by other agencies and policies that i) are more likely to explicitly prescribe fisher behaviour (e.g. when & where fishing may occur), and ii) have not traditionally considered either weather or safety. In this context, mitigating the impacts of weather is best accomplished by bringing a meteorological & health and safety perspective to fisheries management. This could reduce tensions between safety and other factors influencing fisher decisions.

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