The world's best surfers will play a key role in determining whether the world championship returns to South Africa's Jeffreys Bay next year.
This year's event final was cancelled on Sunday after three-time world champion Mick Fanning was attacked by a shark early in the decider against fellow Australian Julian Wilson.
Fanning fought with the shark and was hidden from view for several anxious seconds before rescue crews ferried him and Wilson to the safety of a nearby boat.
After reaching land, the Tweed Heads product admitted he wouldn't care if he never competed again while Wilson revealed his fear that he'd just witnessed his friend die in front of him.
World Surf League (WSL) chief executive Paul Speaker says any decision over whether to abandon Jeffreys Bay as a destination or return there next year will be largely in the hands of competitors.
"The way the commissioner's office is set up is the governing body can't select, nor change, the tour footprint, the locations that we go to without the input of the surfers," Speaker told AAP.
"What we need to do over the next couple of days, couple of weeks and couple of months is decompress a little bit, have conversations that are productive around where we go and what we do.
"We'll be doing that in the next couple of weeks and certainly when we're in Tahiti and we're all together make those decisions then.
"I don't have an answer now on J-Bay next year and nor do we need to, it's a schedule that's done later on in the year."
Speaker said he could not recall an incident where a surfer had been attacked by a shark during a competitive heat of the world tour and praised both Fanning and Wilson for their heroic actions.
He also said the onsite safety team had proven its worth with the quick extraction of both men from the water.
Speaker said he wasn't aware of any sightings of sharks earlier in the day, although he did believe their had been sightings earlier in the week.
He said every event, including the three events in Australia, are managed to try and minimise the risk to competitors.
"The number one thing for us as it relates to safety is to make sure our water safety individuals are trained to be the best in the world and I believe they are," he said.
"They're a collection of individuals that are trained in Hawaii, they're trained in Australia, they're trained in Fiji, Tahiti and California.
"As it relates to event-by-event, certainly there's characteristics of locations that we go to that have deeper risks in certain areas ... it's an unpredictable ocean.
"The ocean is a wonderful, beautiful place but at times it can also be violent and we co-exist with sharks. It's something we take very seriously and it's just a reality of the sport."
Speaker also said the WSL will invest in whatever technologies it needs to ensure it remains "best in class" when it comes to safety in the water.
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