Environment minister Greg Hunt says deaths of eight dolphins and four seals are ‘unacceptable and outrageous’ as ship returns to port

This article is more than 5 years old

This article is more than 5 years old

The Australian environment minister, Greg Hunt, has condemned as “unacceptable and outrageous” the killing of a dozen dolphins and seals by a factory fishing trawler.

The Geelong Star, a ship that environmental groups and some MPs wanted banned from fishing Australian waters, voluntarily returned to its home port after catching four dolphins and two seals on its second local outing.



The Australian Fisheries Management Authority (AFMA) had previously said the ship would face stricter controls after it also caught and killed four dolphins and two seals in its nets on its first trip.



Hunt released a statement on Sunday saying he was “absolutely appalled” by the news, ABC reported.



Hunt said he would write to the AFMA and to Tasmanian senator Richard Colbeck, the parliamentary secretary for fisheries and a strong defender of the trawler’s methods.



The Geelong Star has factory freezer capabilities but escapes a permanent ban on so-called super trawlers because at 95 mteres it is under the 130-metre size limit.



Greens senator Peter Whish-Wilson said the government should cancel the trawler’s fishing licence and management plan immediately.



“They’ve failed twice. The regulator has failed in its job to protect dolphins and seals and who knows whatever other marine life and the boat needs to go home,” he told ABC.



Colbeck released his own statement saying the further deaths of marine mammals was “very bad news and is not welcomed by anyone”.



He said the decision of operators Seafish Tasmania to “voluntarily return to port is appreciated”.



Petition to ban super trawlers sent to parliament as 95-metre boat nears Read more

Colbeck said AFMA – which had an observer on board the trawler since its first trip – retained the government’s confidence “as fisheries managers” with “an excellent track record of managing similar issues in other Australian fisheries”.



“We understand that further work is to be done on marine mammal exclusion devices, this has the potential to benefit fisheries management more broadly given there are a number of other fisheries that use similar fishing methods,” he said.

