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312
Industrialized Fisheries in Arctic & Antarctic Waters:
Selected Atlantic Fishing Industries & Arctic Regions
in a Historical Perspective
Ingo Heidbrink
Fisheries in the high latitudes were, up to the middle of the 20
th
century, largely a domestic affair of the Arctic societies.
Only technological innovations of the 20
th
century, most notably the introduction of factory-freezer-trawlers to the fishing
fleets of a number of industrialized and in particular European countries, enabled low to mid-latitude nations to
participate in these fisheries. After the introduction of highly sophisticated fishing vessels to the distant-water fishing
fleets, a number of conflicts between coastal nations and distant-water fishing nations occurred in the North-Atlantic
basin that resulted in short time in the extension of national fisheries jurisdiction of Arctic and Subarctic nations and
finally in a more or less complete nationalization of the Arctic fisheries. An unintended side effect of this
nationalization was the transfer of fishing conflicts from an international to a domestic level within these nations. Now
there are large-scale industrialized domestic fisheries operating for shareholder value on the one side, and subsistence
fisheries on the other side. After the exclusion of the former distant-water fishing nations from fisheries in the Arctic
parts of the Atlantic, some fishing companies of the nations formerly active in the North Atlantic Arctic region
developed a fishery in the Southern Ocean off Antarctica. With no national jurisdiction but only a somewhat weak
international treaty system in existence, new fishing conflicts arose in the South. But unlike the conflicts in the Arctic,
these conflicts were between multinational groups interested in the protection of the marine ecosystem and
national/multinational companies directly interested in shareholder value. While it seems that the domestic conflicts of
the Arctic and the international conflicts of the Southern Ocean are completely different, they are in fact the two sides of
the same coin. Fisheries in the high latitudes have been, throughout the 20
th
century, a mirror of the wider socio-
economic question if natural resources are a common good or an exploitable resource.
Origins of Non-Domestic Fisheries in High Latitudes
Despite the rapid increase in international distant water-fisheries after the introduction of the first
steam-trawlers at the end of the 19
th
century, Arctic and Antarctic waters saw comparably little non-
domestic fishing activities up to the end of WWII (Baartz, 1991). The fisheries of industrialized