Naturally Interesting

We’re running out of fish

May 14, 2008 · 1 Comment

In the Guardian an article by Alex Renton on why we’re running out of fish. Timely as the West coast faces a salmon ban. Article here.

  • Is anyone not aware that wild fish are in deep trouble? That three-quarters of commercially caught species are over-exploited or exploited to their maximum? Do they not know that industrial fishing is so inefficient that a third of the catch, some 32 million tonnes a year, is thrown away? For every ocean prawn you eat, fish weighing 10-20 times as much have been thrown overboard.
  • So why has the international community failed so badly in its attempts to stop the long-heralded disaster with our fish? ‘Quite simply,’ Roberts says, ‘agreements and deals brokered by politicians will never be satisfactory. They always look for the short-term fix.’ He and his team at York University did a survey of the last 20 years of EU ministerial decisions on fish catches and found that, on average, they set quotas for fishing fleets 15 to 30 per cent higher than those recommended as safe by scientists. What that figure doesn’t tell you is that often, for less threatened species like mackerel or whiting, they have set quotas 100 per cent higher than the science recommended. So, in their efforts to pacify the industry, they are bringing populations that could be sustainably fished into the risk zone,’ he said.
  • According to Greenpeace, Chinese fishing fleets are among the most rapacious when it comes to hoovering up the stocks of small nations in the Pacific and Atlantic. But in no Asian country is the notion of sustainable fishing much developed among consumers - and it is from consumers that any demand for change must come. Because, as Roberts and all the green lobby groups note, the structures and organisations set up by politicians and industry to control fisheries, or even preserve the most endangered species, have entirely failed.by Giant Ginkgo

What can you do? Demand sustainable seafood where you eat and where you shop. The following links can help:

International Seafood Guide

Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch

Take a Fishwatch survey to your local market

Fishonline.org

Categories: environment
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1 response so far ↓

  • venturellak // May 14, 2008 at 12:21 pm

    You did a great job at research here, and for such a commendable cause. Keep up the good work!

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