Emma Desrochers

Contributing editor reporting from Hawaii, U.S.A.

Emma Desrochers is a freelance journalist based in Waialua, Hawaii, who writes about fisheries and sustainability. She graduated from Yale University in June 2021 with an undergraduate degree in environmental studies and mechanical engineering. She has contributed to the environmental conservation field through internships located in Ecuador, Thailand, and Hawaii.


Author Archive

Published on
March 6, 2023

There is a growing awareness across the global seafood industry of the importance of reducing bycatch. But change remains stubbornly hard to come by, according to International Seafood Consulting Group Fisheries Expert Petri Suuronen.

“It is evident that the harsh circumstances and the complex reality faced by commercial fishers often make it a challenging undertaking to adopt bycatch-reduction technologies. That is, the solutions defined

Read More
Published on
February 23, 2023

Pew Charitable Trusts hosted the first global summit on the topic of artificial intelligence (AI) in fisheries monitoring on 17 and 18 January, 2023.

The conference hosted data scientists, analysts, researchers, and policymakers to start the conversation on how AI can improve fisheries management.

The Pew Charitable Trusts International Fisheries Senior Associate Raiana McKinney summarized the three main topics discussed at the summit. The

Read More
Published on
February 16, 2023

The Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation, Community Jameel, Monégasque Association for the Protection of Nature (AMPN), and Blue Abacus announced a partnership on 23 January, 2023, to work together to deploy baited remote underwater video systems (BRUVS) for marine research.

BRUVS was developed by Blue Abacus in 2020, and co-founded by University of Western Australia Professor Jessica Meewig, as a way to film and analyze fish populations

Read More
Published on
February 13, 2023

Global consensus is building around the viability of harvest strategies for fisheries management, according to The Ocean Foundation International Fisheries Conservation Project Director Shana Miller.

Harvest strategies, also known as management procedures, are pre-agreed frameworks for making fisheries management decisions based on a proactive approach designed to achieve long-term sustainability for the fishery. According to an Ocean Foundation

Read More
Published on
February 10, 2023

NOAA Fisheries observers on the U.S. West Coast are moving to the use of tablet-based electronic systems to gather data on fishing vessels, replacing the outmoded pencil-and-paper system previously used.

Two of these systems are the ORCA 1 and 2 systems used by the West Coast Regional Observer Program and OPTECS system used by the West Coast Groundfish Observer Program. 

Eric Brasseur, an electrical electronics technician, who helped to

Read More
Published on
January 27, 2023

A team of researchers at the University of California-Santa Barbara has issued seven recommendations to aid fisheries management organizations adapt to the impacts of climate change.

The recommendations, published in a research paper titled “Harvest control rules used in U.S. federal fisheries management and implications for climate resilience,” include a focus on harvest control rules (HCRs) with pre-agreed guidelines for how much

Read More
Published on
January 16, 2023

The adoption of the Kunming-Montreal Biodiversity Framework at the United Nations Biodiversity Conference (COP15) on 19 December, 2022, in Montreal, Canada could have a broad impact on seafood industry.

The framework involves four goals and 23 action-oriented targets to achieve preservation and effective conservation management of 30 percent of the globe’s terrestrial, inland water, and coastal and marine areas by 2030, a goal pushed by

Read More
Published on
January 13, 2023

FisheryProgress, a major backer of FIP development as part of its work supporting the sustainable seafood movement, is calling on more seafood companies to invest in FIP development to ensure they are sourcing sustainably managed seafood – while also getting a financial benefit from customers increasingly seeking environmentally friendly products. 

Launched in 2016, the FisheryProgress.com website currently reports on more than 96

Read More
Published on
January 6, 2023

Two processing vessels, owned by Phoenix Processors Limited Partnership (PPLP), the M/V Excellence and the M/V Phoenix, have achieved the FISH Standard for Crew Certification. 

The vessels operate as American flagged vessels in the Alaska pollock and Pacific whiting fisheries.

“FISH certification affirms our company’s long-standing dedication to safe operations and responsible treatment of our crew,” PPLP

Read More
Published on
January 4, 2023

The Reponsible Fisheries Management (RFM) certification reassessment process is underway for the Alaska pollock and cod fisheries. 

The public comment period for the assessment opened 19 December, 2022, and runs to 19 January, 2023. The comment period will be followed with the certification determination by the third-party certification body, DNV, which will determine whether the fisheries can be recertified or not.

RFM is a

Read More