An Agent-based Model of the South African Offshore Hake Trawl Industry: Part II Drivers and Trade-offs in Profit and Risk
Authored by Astrid Jarre, Rachel Cooper
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2017.06.027
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Abstract
In South Africa's most valuable fishery, the offshore demersal hake
trawl, participant companies differ in their rightsholdings, product
streams, core business structure and their numbers and types of vessels.
HakeSim, an agent-based model of this fishing industry, is used to
explore these interactions, how companies could cope with increased fuel
prices, and to provide insight into profit-risk trade-offs and
vulnerabilities of companies. Apart from increasing catch per unit
effort (CPUE), which is often detrimental to fish stocks, fuel price
increases could be offset by increasing hake market value, achieved by
processing fish to higher value end products with a lower catch cost per
tonne. Industry's present fleet size and composition is demonstrated to
result from profit risk trade-offs: the flexibility to respond to
mismatches between total allowable catch and CPUE, market demands for
frozen and fresh product types, and environmental variability. Smaller
companies have less risk-averse strategies and are more vulnerable to
uncertainty in catches than larger companies, which may explain ongoing
trends in consolidation in the industry. Increasing the proxy for
environmental uncertainty increased risk to all companies without
increasing profits. Incorporating more realistic environmental effects
and feedbacks with industry in HakeSim could be an exciting future
direction. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Risk
systems
resource
Efficiency
fisheries
Uk
Trawl fishery
Fleet-size
Cpue
Fuel price
Profitability in fisheries
Mean-variance analysis
Fishing communities