Italy and Panama continue illegal fishing, says new report
By Morgan Erickson-Davis, mongabay.comJanuary 15, 2011
On Wednesday, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) issued its biennial report identifying six countries whose fisheries have been engaged in illegal, unreported, or unregulated (IUU) fishing during the past two years. The report comes at a time when one-fifth of reported fish catches worldwide are caught illegally and commercial fishing has led to a global fish stock overexploitation of an estimated 80 percent.
The identified nations will have two years to comply with mandates against IUU fishing or risk economic sanction.
"If a nation fails to take appropriate action to address the instances of illegal fishing described in the report, that nation’s vessels may be denied entry into U.S. ports and the President may prohibit imports of certain fish products from that nation or take other measures," said Russell Smith, NOAA deputy assistant secretary for international fisheries. “We are encouraged that the nations identified in 2009 have taken significant actions to address illegal fishing by their vessels, and we are now reaching out to the six countries identified in today’s report,”
A sea turtle entangled in a piece of abandoned driftnet. Photo by NOAA |
However, of the countries listed in the recent report, Italy and Panama have been carried over from 2009. NOAA states that while the governments of these countries took corrective actions to address the problems of its fisheries, vessels were still found to be conducting illegal fishing practices such as use of driftnets and purse-seining in areas closed to that activity.
The practice of driftnetting involves letting loose a large net which passively snares fish while it drifts along on prevailing ocean currents. The method has a large rate of by-catch and has been found to be especially dangerous for marine mammals. The EU bans their use completely, while a global moratorium was enacted in 1992 which forbids the use of driftnets over 2.5 kilometers in length.
“Illegal fishing must be stopped," said Smith, "as it subjects our fishermen to unfair competition and undermines efforts to sustainably manage the valuable fish stocks around the world that so many communities depend on for food and jobs.”
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