Report finds climate change rarely part of Atlantic Canada’s fisheries management
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Climate change is rarely factored into management decisions for fisheries in Atlantic Canada and the eastern Arctic, according to a report released Wednesday from a national marine conservation group.
Report author Daniel Boyce, a research associate with the Ocean Frontier Institute at Dalhousie University, says that needs to change.
“We want to be able to prevent further collapses and promote recovery of species like the cod that has been under moratoria for almost 30 years now,” Boyce said in an interview Monday, referring to the northern cod off the southeast coast of Newfoundland and Labrador. That species was decimated in the late 1980s and early 1990s, forcing federal authorities to impose a fishing moratorium in 1992. It’s still in place today.
To save species like the cod, Boyce said, “we need to be incorporating climate change. There’s no debate about that.”

