Blue Pastures in Public Trust The United States currently imports about 75 percent of the seafood Americans eat, adding $7 billion to our trade deficit last year. This is something the Bush administration would very much like to change, and it is the president’s stated goal to reduce the nation’s seafood trade deficit to zero by 2025. Given the country’s growing population and its reliance on stock from the severely over-fished waters off America’s coasts, this is no small challenge. One administration solution is to lease vast regions of the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) — waters between three and 200 miles offshore — to industrial fish farmers. As they do elsewhere in the world, these high-tech aquaculturalists would suspend huge cages into the cool, calm water beneath the waves and surface currents, known to oceanographers as the pelagic zone. Salmon, cod, amberjack, flounder, halibut, red snapper, threadfin and cobia will be raised in the cages, like cattle in feedlots, fed ground fishmeal robotically from rafts on the surface. When the fish are grown and ready for market their cages will be raised to the surface for harvest. A battle is brewing between critics of the NOAA plan, who call it “Ocean Ranching” and its supporters who have dubbed it “The Blue Pastures Initiative.” Environmentalists argue that ocean aquaculture is already creating serious ecological challenges with escaped fish (some of them transgenic), parasite and disease transfer from farmed to wild stock, massive sewage discharge and other unsustainable usage of marine resources. Relocating the farms to the open ocean will also remove them from state control and limit public scrutiny. At hearings held before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, serious environmental questions were raised about open ocean aquaculture. Escaped fish are particularly problematic as they are capable of interbreeding with and compromising the gene pool of wild stock. They can also overtake habitat. Atlantic salmon now run wild in the Pacific. And according to a recent article in Science magazine, mercury, PCBs and other waterborne toxins are found in aqua-farmed fish at levels three to five times those in wild fish, a consequence of feeding the captives contaminated fish meat. Water pollution from pathogens, antibiotics and nitrogen are also expected. Supporters of the initiative acknowledge some of those problems, but claim they will be greatly reduced by moving fish farms out of coastal waters, which are more environmentally sensitive than the open ocean. NOAA claims to be aware of the hazards of aquaculture and has promised to include environmental impact analysis and regulatory oversight in the proposed legislation, alongside provisions to streamline 10-year site permits through a “one stop permitting process.” If a bill ever passes Congress, whatever NOAA comes up with will certainly be tested in federal court. There jurists will grapple with property and stewardship questions in the legally uncharted pelagic. According to Alison Rieser, a marine lawyer at the University of Maine, “There is no clear legal basis for granting property rights that are needed to protect the large investments necessary to build and operate offshore aquaculture facilities in the open ocean.” A Venerable Doctrine The notion of a public trust has a venerable history. It was first proffered in 528 AD, when the Roman Emperor Justinian decided to condense the unpublished rules and edicts handed down by his predecessors and create a unified code of imperial law. A year later, 10 legal experts delivered the Codex Justinianus, to which the emperor then added an idea expressed by the jurist Marcius two centuries earlier: By the law of nature these things are common to all mankind, the air, running water, the sea and consequently the shores of the sea. Since then, the Public Trust Doctrine has percolated through centuries of war, successor empires and colonization. As English, French and Spanish kings built their empires, the doctrine was adopted as common law. When new American states joined the original 13 colonies they too were bound by a common law that granted state governments sovereign rights to common land and sovereign responsibility for its care. The idea of the public trust was synonymous with America’s promise of freedom. Several states eventually wrote some form of the ancient code directly into their constitutions. For example, Article 1, Section 27 of the Pennsylvania State Constitution says: In early American history the doctrine was used almost exclusively to protect the public’s interest in one very vital aspect of the commons: water. Just as Justinian had declared, navigable water, whether in the sea or flowing to it, was, along with shorelines, beaches and river bottoms, the common property of the nation’s citizens. Courts ruled that it was owned by everyone and no one at once, an unwritten easement protected by the water’s steward — the state. In the years that followed, American courts, state and federal, even the U.S. Supreme Court, upheld that interpretation. The landmark public trust case occurred in 1892 when the U.S. Supreme Court held in Illinois Central Railroad vs. Illinois that a state legislature could not grant ownership of land under navigable water to a private party, in this case the railroad, which had been granted, fee simple, a thousand acres of shoreline and underwater land — the entire waterfront of Chicago. Although water and shorelines have been the most frequent beneficiaries of public trust protection, the doctrine has become amphibious. Air, forests, public lands, natural beauty and cultural artifacts have recently been defended as common assets worthy of public trust protection. The open ocean, on the other hand, is considered a global commons, protected by the Law of the Sea and other international agreements. But there is a long ribbon of ocean water, 200 miles wide, hugging the coast of every continent, in which ownership rights and stewardship responsibility is still unclear. President Bill Clinton signed the Law of The Sea Treaty in 1994, but in deference to ocean mining interests, which sought unimpeded access to the entire ocean floor, Jesse Helms, then Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, refused to hold hearings that might have led to ratification. There are other compelling reasons, strategic and environmental, not to ratify the treaty. So it may never happen. However, stewardship of the zone it created will certainly become a factor in the legal contest that awaits ocean fish ranching, as will the Public Trust Doctrine. Ratified or not, the treaty defines “eez” which applies to all nations, and is an area which the federal government clearly acknowledges by name in all its reports and studies, and will surely include in its draft legislation. If they don’t invoke the zone by name, and site the law of the sea as its creator, they risk losing all rights to it. The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld Public Trust Doctrine four times in the nation’s history, but in each case it has been protecting a state’s use of the doctrine. It has never claimed it as federal common law, which could apply in ocean waters beyond the states’ three mile limit. That doesn’t necessarily mean that the Public Trust Doctrine is not federal, it only means it has never been established as such. And just because courts have never applied the doctrine to the EEZ doesn’t mean they can’t. Closing Argument Because its legal system was built on British common law, which included the Public Trust Doctrine, the United States government held an implied public trust obligation over navigable waters in each territory until it was granted statehood. Each new state, upon entering the Union, assumed its own obligation over the same waters. But even after all territories had become states, the federal government still maintained public trust responsibility over oceanic shorelines until coastal state control was extended three miles from the shoreline by the Submerged Lands Act of 1953. The Law of The Sea Treaty did not exist, so the U.S. federal government controlled the next nine miles off shore, out to the 12 mile limit described by international agreement as the territorial waters of all nations. The rest was regarded as open ocean, open to all travelers and fishermen. Federal courts have ruled that the Public Trust Doctrine does not apply outside “the territorial sea” but have not defined where territorial seas begin or end — at the three, 12 or 200 mile limits. If the doctrine is accepted as relevant and applicable in the EEZ, the specter of public trust rights will make it very difficult for NOAA or any agency to entice capital intensive sea farmers into the pelagic zone, because it would be so easy for environmentalists and other political opponents to defeat them in court. Aquaculture corporations will want stronger property rights than the government can legally offer them under the doctrine of public trust. Opponents, including commercial fishers of wild stock, who are beginning to see themselves as the planet’s last hunter-gatherers, are expecting government litigants and their industry supporters to contest any mention or invocation of public trust in the open ocean. Meanwhile advocates of the commons see an inviting opportunity to affirm a federal Public Trust Doctrine that extends at least 200 miles off shore and use it to challenge the further privatization of what they call “the blue frontier.” “When you fence off large parts of the sea you’re also taking on a responsibility for its protection,” says David Helvarg, President of the Washington, DC-based Blue Frontier Campaign. “Privatizing the frontier was a bad idea when Congress was selling off public lands to railroad trusts for pennies on the acre. It’s a worse idea today as we’re only beginning to explore and discover the true values of our nation’s largest public asset.”
|
![]() Yellowfin tuna raised in an open ocean pen in Mexico. |