No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveChinchilla swears in commission that will examine how country manages marine resources

Chinchilla swears in commission that will examine how country manages marine resources

President Laura Chinchilla swore in members of a commission created to “improve good governance” of Costa Rica’s marine resources Wednesday, according to a statement released by the Presidency Ministry.

Chinchilla announced the creation of the commission in November after meeting with representatives of conservation groups and small-scale fishermen. The groups say the Costa Rican Fisheries Institute (Incopesca) is soft on shark-finning and has a conflict of interest in managing fisheries since members of Incopesca’s board of directors have business interests in commercial fishing fleets.

The Presidency Ministry’s statement does not mention Incopesca, but states the president’s view on local marine issues.

It reads, in part: “the country’s seas generate different goods and services associated with a variety of activities such as: commercial and sport fishing, mariculture, shipping, marketing and transit routes, marine merchant port unloading, tourism, marinas and docks, whale watching and research and conservation of marine biodiversity.”

The president said the country must “resize its vision and broaden its perspective in relation to marine resources” to ensure their protection and sustainable use in the future.

Members of the Incopesca board of directors said they welcome the commission’s analysis. Executive President Luis Dobles called environmental groups’ accusations about ignoring shark-finning “absolutely false” indicating that in Costa Rica any boat fishing for sharks commercially are required to unload their catch at public docks, with the sharks’ fins attached to the bodies. He said the institute performed more than 3,000 inspections of boats carrying sharks in 2011.

The committee is made up of: María Virginia Cajiao, an environmental adviser to Chinchilla; Vice Minister of Agriculture and Livestock Xinia Chaves; Vice Minister of Environment, Energy and Telecommunications Ana Lorena Guevara; Carlos Alvarado from the Costa Rican Institute on Drugs; and Marco Quesada an expert in oceanography and marine biology from the non-governmental organization, Conservation International.

No representative of Incopesca is on the commission.

Trending Now

Costa Rica Biologists Identify New Insect Species in Museum Collections

Biologists at the University of Costa Rica have uncovered 16 new species of leafhoppers after examining insect collections that sat untouched in museums for...

WTA Crowns Gauff-Zheng Rome Semifinal as 2025 Match of the Year

The WTA has named the grueling Rome semifinal between Coco Gauff and Qinwen Zheng as its 2025 Match of the Year, a fan-voted honor...

Costa Rica’s Zapote Festival Returns: Dates, Times and Music Lineup

The Fiestas de Zapote draw thousands each year to celebrate the end of one year and the start of another. For visitors to Costa...

US Halts Diversity Visa Program Following Deadly Campus Attacks

The United States government has stopped its diversity visa program in response to recent shootings at two top universities. Officials point to the suspect's...

Vote recount in Honduras advances amid mistrust and Trump reprisals

In a warehouse the size of two basketball courts, hundreds of people are manually reviewing the votes that will decide the winner of Honduras’s...

Honduras Sticks with Nighttime Border Shutdowns, Complicating Travel for Visitors

Travelers heading to Honduras face ongoing hurdles at land borders, where officials shut down crossings each night. The country's immigration service halts operations for...
Avatar
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica