In the Cayman Islands, the discussion about
whether to allow shark diving there is warming up.
Guy Harvey is one of the dive industry vets calling on
the government to consider licensing dive operators to
run shark interaction dives, saying it could be a boost
to the island's economy, raise awareness of shark conservation
and create a financial incentive to protect
the species.
Steve Broadbelt, owner of Ocean Frontiers, used to
run shark interaction dives before they were banned in
2002. He told the Cayman Compass there are legitimate
concerns about sharks associating divers and boats
with food, but there are well-established protocols in
other areas to mitigate this risk. "Cayman is at a significant
disadvantage by not permitting shark dives. We
have always had a healthy population of sharks on the
East End of Grand Cayman and in some other areas
around the destination. We lose a lot of business to
the Bahamas specifically due to the shark diving that
is offered there . . . There are industry-wide standards
and best practices on shark feeding that must be followed
and have a proven safety track record."
Harvey thinks the climate may be changing.
"Cayman is more tuned in to this issue than ever.
People have a lot more concept of the value of a living
shark."
The locals on Stewart Island, at the southern tip
of New Zealand, have launched an attack on the
Department of Conservation (DOC) for allowing
caged shark diving in their waters. A petition with 768 signatures calling for an immediate ban was presented
to Parliament on December 2. Stewart Island resident
Ken McAnergney told TVNZ he's outraged that DOC
is continuing to grant permits, given the change in
great white sharks' behavior since the cage diving
started, and they're now associating boats with an
"easy, healthy, tasty meal," becoming so aggressive that
people can "no longer safely enter the sea."
The DOC had shark cage diving expert Barry Bruce
from Australia's Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization review cage diving practices at Stewart
Island, and he found no evidence that shark cage
diving increased the risk to people in the water. Ken
Hughey, DOC's chief science advisor, told TVNZ that
while the dive operators use bait to attract the great
whites, they are not allowed to feed them.
However, last summer, the DOC found one shark
cage dive operator had breached its permit after sending
'secret shopper' observers on dive trips to see how
they were run. Reports showed multiple breaches of
permit conditions and the code of practice, including
failure to stop a dive when a great white shark became
agitated and allowing sharks to take throw baits.
On December 13, a group representing the commercial
abalone fishing industry took the DOC to
court over its licensing of shark cage diving, wanting
the agency to revisit its decision for granting licenses
to the shark cage operators who breached permit conditions
and are now on their last warning.