PLANNED
FAILURE

Neil Stanton, the Provincial Fisheries Officer, meets us at the
small wooden dock of the Provincial Fisheries Center. He's lived in PNG most of his life
and is an astute, charming man. Neil shows us around the Fisheries Center he's built.
Young local boys, ranging from 14 to about 20, are busy with various projects. His
trainees build boats, learn how to fix engines, how to fish, clean and care for the fish
products, and how to get along in a friendly way with each other. Neil keeps them in line
and somehow manages to do it in a way that keeps them happy.
Neil yells at one of the boys in the local language. The boy looks frightened
and runs off to do whatever Neil said. "They appreciate discipline," Neil says
with a half-smile. He shows us their smoke curing facility where they smoke beche-de-mer
and giant clam meat for export.
"Giant clam meat? Yeah. I heard you guys got quite a haul down
in Sudest." I look over the sweet-smoke filled interior of the wood shack. The only
thing drying is a set of tiger shark jaws easily big enough to pass over my body without
touching me.
"Those guys were supposed to be tuna fishing," Neil
groans. "They came back with all that clam meat, so we thought we'd smoke it and try
a big cash export. But they let the bloody fire go out and the whole lot got fungus. We
tossed it all away."
I look at Neil and begin to seethe. "Your boys killed all those
big clams, in a taboo area, and they just got tossed out?"
"Well, the pigs ate them. There are plenty more out
there." Neil ignores, or does not care, that I am fuming. "Anyway, we never
expected this place to be commercially profitable. Hell, New Zealand tinned fish is
cheaper in Burns Philip than we can ever produce it for here."
There is no point in making a stink about the giant clams until we
actually do our survey and show what the population is. Or isn't.
"You're right," we follow him on to the boat building
shed. "In addition to low density and high diversity making coral reef products
costly to get, there is the problem of phosphate."
Neil looks at me, curious, "What about phosphate?"
"Coral reefs are phosphate sinks - they capture phosphates from
the sea and from terrestrial run-off. In the tropical sea, the only phosphate available is
bound up in living tissue. Living tissue doesn't need much, but there is so little
available in tropical sea water it is THE limiting factor. Biologically, everything on the
reef depends on phosphate."
"No kidding? Hey, get your ass moving!" He shouts to a boy
who is snoozing under a half-built boat. "They build their own boat and then get to
fish it," Neil looks over the work as the boy begins shaping a piece of wood.
"So what does phosphate have to do with our operation?"

"Everything. Plankton eating fish play a vital role in the Reef
community's phosphate cycle. They capture tiny animals from the sea like a big mobile net
- with individual fish as the knots in the net.
"The waste from the fish, rich in phosphate and nitrate, drops
down onto the reef. Corals eat the pellets of waste and use the phosphate to fertilize
their algae. Sea Birds cast an aerial net hundreds of miles over the sea. They return to
the reef islands at night and when they drop their wastes, it forms Guano, one of the
world's most important sources of fertilizer. Some of this phosphate meters into the sea
with each rain and the corals and algae of the reef capture it.
"The herbivorous and carnivorous reef fish and other animals
get their phosphate and their habitat from the algae and living corals. And your boys
catch the fish and other animals."
"That's really very interesting, Richard. But what's the
practical application?" Neil looks at me expectantly.

"Simply this. If you overfish a reef, you remove
the plankton net. If you kill the sea birds, or chase them away, you remove the aerial
phosphate trap. Intensive fishing removes the reserve phosphates tied up in the bulk of
reef fish and other animals. Do this, and the reef finds itself phosphate starved and
without means to replenish the phosphate."
"And it stops growing?" Neil asks as we resume walking
back towards the dock.
"Right. You cause a long term, maybe irreversible break-down in
the whole cycle. Commercial exploitation of tropical coral reefs inevitably results in the
destruction of the habitat."
"Like farming the soil too hard can destroy it forever," Neil frowns.
"Exactly. Just like timbering a tropical island will ruin it's
soil and its water cycle."
"Aww, we're hardly touching the reefs around here. Come on,
Richard, think of the reefs between here and Sudest." Neil laughs.
"How's the fishing here in this bay?" I ask.
"Well, that's different, the boys hit this area pretty good for
lunch food."

"Right. For lunch. And there are villages scattered everywhere
throughout these islands. Maybe your boys are not hitting those reefs, but the subsistence
fishermen are. I'm not saying your boys are a danger to the reefs. What I'm saying is the
local people probably fish the reefs close to the limit. I don't think there is an export
reserve here to feed the highlands or the rest of the world. Even if there was, you could
never, as you say, compete economically with the high latitude fisheries who sweep up tons
of fish in a single trawl haul."
"Listen, I have to get back to it here. You going shopping
today?"
"Right." Freddy is already in the Avon, ready to leave for
Samarai. Two young boys are pulling a big tiger shark up to the wharf.
"Why not stop by my island on the way home this evening and
continue our chat?" Neil points to Eboma, a little island just northwest of Samarai.
"Sounds great. Where did they catch Mr. Monster?" I ask,
pointing to the nearly dead shark.
"Just around the corner here. China Straits is crawling with
them. Want to buy some teeth?" Freddy is frowning at the shark, no doubt thinking of
my diving alone in the middle of China Straits.
The wharf at Samarai is lined with island boats and canoes. "Ho
ho, looks like it's a bustling little town, today," I say as we tie up. Today is
Friday - market day. Freddy and I walk down streets crowded with brightly dressed people.
In the market area, vendors sit on coconut mats with little piles of baby tomatoes, green
onions, cabbage, papayas, and pineapples. I find some of the delicious mountain cat-tails.
When green, they are so succulent it is unbelievable. Freddy steams them and serves them
with butter. They taste just like baby corn.
Smoked octopus hang like parchment kites in the gentle wind and children race
in and out of the milling people. A big crowd has gathered to listen to an evangelist. The
guy is good, he's got the people singing hymns. He gets so enthusiastic he leaps up into
the air with the upbeats. I lose sight of Freddy. No matter.
I amble up the main street and meet the manager of Steamships
Trading store. He is a short little guy with a hunch back. We open negotiations on an
outboard swap. I want a smaller one he wants a bigger one. We have a three year old 35 hp
Evenrude, he had a brand new 15 hp Evenrude. He bought it for his wooden fishing boat but
it is simply not strong enough.
About five, I show up at the Avon. Freddy is sitting amid heaps of
groceries. She has a miserable look on her face. "What's wrong?" I ask.
"Where were you when I needed you?" She complains.
"Uh, here and there. Mostly with the guy from
Steamships. I helped him out with a little project replanting some trees. He wants to swap
outboards. Then I had to get fuel. So what happened?"
"There was a little boy at the market who came up to me with
the biggest pearl I've ever seen. He wanted anything for it. I didn't have a watch on. I
didn't have any more money. I couldn't find you. It was TERRIBLE."
"Well where is he? Let's go find him." I look around
expecting to find the kid standing there, pearl in hand.
"I don't know. I lost him looking for you." Freddy mopes.
We motor out to Neil's island for sunset drinks. Neil's island is
isolated, tiny, cute, tropical, and his house is big. "One of the left over delights
of the colonial days," Neil says as we sit down on the veranda, overlooking China
Straits. Neil has put out a tray with cold beer and glasses. He passes them around and
puts his big bare feet up on the rail. "So, tell me what you think about National
Fisheries and their Coastal Development Program," he closes his eyes and takes a
long, cool slurp of his beer.
"That's dangerous," Freddy shoots back.
Neil looks at her, "What?"
"It's always dangerous to ask him what he thinks about anything
unless you want an hour lecture." she smiles.
"Hey!" I protest.
Neil chuckles and gestures for me to go ahead, "Lecture on
Professor."
"Well, OK. First, I think your provincial fisheries operation
here is terrific. You're working on a grass-roots level, helping the youth, building the
fisheries industry into the whole community. Quite frankly, I admire what you have
accomplished. It would seem, to me, the best approach for development of fisheries in PNG
would be to have people like you, people who are attuned to the community on the
real-world level, act as the leaders in long term development. The National team should
provide back up, as needed, to support your projects and integrate and coordinate regional
projects between sectors." Neil starts to say something but I am just starting.
"This is, I realize, dimly conceived of in theory by the
existing government. But it is not carried out in practice for two reasons. First, the
productive, sensitive agents - such as yourself - are on the bottom, not the top, of the
chain of command. Second, the money comes from exterior aid agencies and is tied to big
money development projects. It is administratively easier for the U.N. or the World Bank
to give a big sum, like $7 million dollars, to pay for an integrated construction-type
project, than to try and put together fifty or sixty little projects of local interest.
"The aid agencies are constrained by their own national
political scene and by economics. It makes sense for them to give funds for industrial or
building projects because their own countries will supply the equipment and materials to
do the work so the money is actually recycled. It also makes sense to give funds for
projects resulting in the export (to the donor countries) of natural resources.
"The PNG government likes big money projects - especially for
industrial or building activities. If the money is for building freezer plants and tuna
canneries, there is ample opportunity for powerful individuals to get financially
involved. If you get my meaning. In the end, recycling money is more important to the
National Government and to the Aid agency than the actual business of developing a
socially and ecologically sound way of life. This is true in all areas of development,
including the fisheries industry."
I take a sip of beer. "Ultimately, the Director and the aid
donors believe the multi-million dollar freezer/cannery project will work because of the
unlimited fisheries resources out there. But I don't think the resources exist. I don't
think the reefs will support large scale commercial fisheries and so the project depends
on an unknown pelagic fish resource - especially tuna. But nobody knows what is actually
out there. Also, freezers and canneries only get filled up by tuna if there are hi-tech
tuna boats manned by fishermen who know what they are doing, and backed up by support
facilities to keep the ships working. And foreign tuna boats won't stop at coastal freezer
plants, they head for major canneries.
"The project can fail from a thousand directions, including
deliberate sabotage by people who would rather leech off the funds than let them be used
for real construction. Since the money must be filtered through the Government Finance
Office, only a small proportion will ever trickle down to actually pay for real
construction. Almost nothing will seep out to help guys like you develop the backbone of
the industry.
"Maybe the fish stocks are not there or maybe they are highly
seasonal. Maybe the people won't work in the canneries. Maybe local fishermen don't want
to work hard for months at a time. Maybe the cost of getting back up supplies and
materials to the outer islands will turn out to be just too expensive for the canneries to
compete with Asian, Fijian or American Samoan canneries. The local fishermen will be
outraged if the canneries try to buy local-caught tuna from licensed foreign fishing
boats. Mostly because the local fishermen will believe (correctly) the foreign boats are
taking food from their families.
"PNG is one of the most politically complicated countries in
the Pacific. This is bound to result in a real bash-em-up when, and if, National Fisheries
tries to get the dollars from the Capital into one of the Provinces." I slow down and
then stop. I've already talked too much.
"Wow. I wish I had taped that," Neil catches my startled
look. "No, I mean just for myself, I'd like to listen to it again. It's what I feel
every time I go up to visit them. Have you talked to Peter about this?"
"Some. He's hard to talk to about most of it. He's going to
make it work and that's that."
"Yeah, I know exactly what you mean. Care for another
beer?" Neil gets up.
"It's going to get dark before we get home," Freddy warns.
"Right," I get up to go.
"What next?" Neil asks as we walk down to the wharf.
"I've got some things to do here and then, maybe next month,
we'll be off to the Trobriand Islands, to survey some more pearl oysters," Freddy and
I get into the Avon.
"Stop by the office tomorrow, I'll give you some information on
anchorages and I'll fill you in on what I know about the place. Give you some people to
contact." Neil stands on the wharf as we start the engine and head off for Belasona
and the Moira.
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