Workers at a tuna packing plant resting on boxes for export.

Fair fisheries

Industrial fishing fleets have decimated and almost destroyed their own fisheries and now, rather than accept that they need to reduce their fishing capacity, fishing fleets are turning greedy eyes towards the Pacific and West Africa.

Rather than fix the problem at home, fishing fleets from the North are taking their problems into the relatively healthy oceans in the South. The future of these oceans, and of the coastal communities whose livelihoods depend from it, are increasingly at the mercy of unscrupulous fishers and a growing global appetite for tuna.

The Western and Central Pacific Ocean is home to over 20 island nations and the world's largest tuna fishery. More than half of the world's tuna supply, about two million tonnes each year, comes from this region .It has recently become clear that some of the key target species are in danger of being overfished, so far from being one of the last healthy fisheries in the world, it is being increasingly preyed upon by distant nations and illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) pirate fishing - boats that take as much fish as they like.

Ripping off the Pacific communities

Pacific people have fished the ocean for thousands of years, managing traditional fishing grounds in a sustainable way. Today a fleet of locally based vessels, owned by foreign and local companies, catch about 200,000 tonnes (10 percent of the total catch) of tuna a year. But increasing numbers of industrial distant water fishing boats are moving into the Pacific, taking about 1,800,000 tonnes (90 percent ofthe total catch). Instead of reducing their fishing effort and the number of boats when they fish out their own fishing grounds, countries like China, Korea, Taiwan, Japan, the USA and the EU simply move on to the next fishing ground - the Pacific.

To make matters worse, the practice is also financially exploitative - the economic return from access fees and licences to the region is a mere 5 percent or less of the US$2 billion the fish is worth on the market. Of course, the returns from pirate fishing are non-existent. Pirate fishing boats do not comply with any rules and only disadvantage the region.

The Pacific is at a crossroads. One path leads to sustainable and equitable fisheries, a healthy marine environment and stable and prosperous island communities. The other path leads to the collapse of the major tuna fishery and loss of livelihood and food supply for the people of the Pacific.

The latest updates

 

Nauru Comes Through

Blog entry by Steve Connolly, on board the Esperanza | October 14, 2011 1 comment

Recently the Esperanza and crew had a short stop in Nauru, a small Pacific island country between Kiribati and the Marshall Islands. Our stop here happened to come just days after Nauru called for the closure to longline fishing in...

Ending pirate fishing for the future of the Pacific

Blog entry by Lagi Toribau, Greenpeace Australia Pacific | October 4, 2011 2 comments

Pohnpei is a beautiful tropical island in the middle of the Central Pacific, the largest and most populated island of the Federated States of Micronesia. Much to its green lush beauty is down to the rain that falls every day and the...

Victory! John West changes its tuna

Blog entry by Simon Clydesdale | July 26, 2011 6 comments

Our international campaign to clean up tinned tuna has had another victory! After more than 51,000 emails, a lot of negotiation and some interesting stickering initiatives , John West is the last of the major UK players to shift...

Defending the Pacific

Slideshow | June 20, 2011

Clover Leaf under pressure as tinned tuna campaign heats up in Canada

Blog entry by Sarah King | May 28, 2011 8 comments

Our fast-moving international campaign to make tinned tuna sustainable took another big step forward this week as we began a push on Canada’s largest tinned tuna brand Clover Leaf . The company currently uses an extremely...

African fishermen share their stories with UK leaders

Blog entry by Gemma Freeman | May 21, 2011 2 comments

African Voices: Unloading fish from pirogues in the harbour of Joal. © Gordon Welters / Greenpeace Three leaders of West African fishing communities arrived in the UK this past week to reveal how massive European fleets...

Victory! You pushed Princes to start protecting our oceans

Feature story | March 9, 2011 at 15:39

It is with enormous pleasure that we can reveal a groundbreaking victory for our oceans campaign: Princes, a leading tinned tuna brand, finally got your message that canning ocean destruction is unacceptable. Thanks to your efforts - the company...

International Unsustainable Overfishing

Blog entry by Sari Tolvanen | March 4, 2011 3 comments

Skipjack tuna and bycatch caught in the eastern Pacific using a Fish Aggregation Device (FAD) in 2009. Despite the crisis facing our oceans , we often hear excuses from industry players: telling us that we do not need urgent...

Goodbye to Taiwan: The Rainbow moves on...

Blog entry by Ronetava Ronaivakulu | January 31, 2011 3 comments

Bula again everyone. This is my last blog from the Rainbow Warrior. I just want to reminisce about what has transpired during this first part of the East Asia Ocean Defenders Tour in Taiwan. First of all I just want to state what a...

Talking tuna

Blog entry by LisaV | January 29, 2011 1 comment

Karli Thomas, oceans campaigner with Greenpeace since 2005, discusses the worldwide decline of tuna and other fish stocks on Radio New Zealand . Click below to listen.   Take Action: Write to Princes ,...

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