Boat International US Edition - June 2018

(lu) #1

THE OCEAN AWARDS 2018


In 1999, Ben Kibel, a mechanical engineer, and his brother, Pete,


a fisheries specialist and biologist, founded Fishtek Marine to


develop gadgets that make fishing less harmful to marine life.


When fishing for swordfish, fishers tend to use chemical

lightsticks or glowsticks to attract the fish. They are highly


polluting if they are discarded in the ocean, which about 700


million are each year. Fishtek’s solution, ProGlow, is an


inexpensive, endurable, reusable alternative, weighing just over


half an ounce and depth-rated to 3,300ft. There are three models


with varying degrees of brightness, all fueled by two replaceable


AAA batteries, and the basic model should last two years.


The Kibels were also exercised by bycatch, the unintended

harming of turtles, sharks, cetaceans and especially seabirds.
Hookpod is a transparent pod fitted to the line that encapsulates
the point of the hook and barb, releasing it only when it sinks
between 33ft and 50ft below the surface of the ocean, where water
pressure activates the mechanism. At that depth the bait will no
longer be swooped on by albatrosses, petrels or shearwaters,
which cannot dive that deep. The pod is retrieved when the line
is hauled in and can be reused, so there’s no waste.
The Hookpod company was formed in 2013, and the device has
been successfully trialed in Brazil, Japan, Australia and New
Zealand, though Hookpod remains based in Devon, UK. As the
company’s slogan puts it: save money, save time, save seabirds.

The Innovation Award


BEN KIBEL


Inventor of ProGlow, an endurable, reusable alternative lightstick


Winner

MOMO KOCHEN
Pioneer of first Fairtrade
wild fish

Indonesia catches more tuna than any
othernationandisoneoftheleading
producers of wild-capture fish. But its six
million small-scale fishers have been
increasingly excluded from global markets
because they’re unable to prove they’re
complying with sustainability regulations,
which denies them access to Fairtrade
certification. Thanks to Masyarakat Dan
Perikanan Indonesia (MDPI) and its former
director of programs and research, Momo
Kochen, working in partnership with the
Dutch international fish importer Anova
Seafood, Indonesian yellowfin tuna caught
by small-scale handline fishermen in
North Maluku has become the world’s first
Fairtrade-certified wild fish. Since leaving
MDPI, Kochen has joined Future of Fish,
theUSnonprofitsystemschange
incubator, which strives “to create
business solutions to ocean challenges.”

Finalists

Masyarakat Dan Perikanan Indonesia
(MDPI) was founded in 2013 to promote
responsible and sustainable fishing in the area.
Thanks to its eforts, yellowfin tuna caught by
small-scale local fishermen is now Fairtrade-
certified, thus improving their income
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