1.3. The Puzzling Dynamics of International Fisheries

By now I hope your curiosity about modelling is stirred, but before probing the basic concepts and tools used by system dynamics modellers, I want to show you a model, a small model, designed to address an important contemporary issue facing society. I will explain its main assumptions, demonstrate some simulations and then give you the opportunity to run the simulator for yourself.

The topic is fisheries. The problems of overexploitation facing international fisheries are well known, widely reported in the press and a subject of government policy in many nations. The performance of international fisheries is indeed puzzling. Fish naturally regenerate. They are a renewable resource, in apparently endless supply, providing valuable and healthy food for billions of consumers and a livelihood for hundreds of thousands of fishing communities worldwide. The fishing industry has been in existence since the dawn of civilisation and should last forever. Yet fish stocks around the world are volatile and some are even collapsing. Once rich fishing grounds such as Canada's Grand Banks now yield no catch at all. Stocks in other areas, such as the English Channel, the North Sea and the Baltic, are in terminal decline.

The issue is powerfully expressed by environmental journalist Charles Clover (2004) in his acclaimed book The End of the Line. Here is an excerpt from Chapter 1:

Fish were once seen as renewable resources, creatures that ...

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