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

 

Oceans in the Balance

Publication | May 6, 2013 at 11:00

SECOND EDITION - Updated May 2013 Every second breath we take comes from the ocean. Billions of people rely on our oceans for their food and for employment. In return, we are plundering the oceans of fish, choking them with pollution and...

The Need for a High Seas Biodiversity Agreement

Publication | May 2, 2013 at 15:43

The current way of managing the high seas puts short-term corporate interests before the long-term health of our oceans. Unless action is taken to restore and protect the health of our oceans, they will be unable to sustain life on Earth.

Ocean Expeditions 2012

Publication | February 26, 2013 at 14:57

In 2012, the Rainbow Warrior undertook a 9-week expedition through the Indian Ocean's fishing grounds, and the Esperanza undertook a 3-week expedition in Pacific Commons Area 1 and the EEZ of Palau. Both expeditions documented fishing operations;...

Changing Tuna

Publication | March 21, 2012 at 16:01

The global tuna industry is undergoing a period of rapid transformation.

Tinned Tuna & Fish Aggregation Devices

Publication | November 17, 2010 at 16:06

Greenpeace report on genetic testing of tinned tuna from around the world, showing how tuna is being mixed following the unsustainable use of fish aggregation devices.

How Africa is feeding Europe

Publication | September 30, 2010 at 12:26

Many of Europe's fishing fleets have the capacity to fish two to three times more than the sustainable level. This overcapacity has led to the current dire state of European fisheries. In European waters, the level of overfishing is higher than...

The inconvenient truth of Taiwan's Flags of Convenience

Publication | September 29, 2010 at 10:00

Taiwan is at the centre of the crises facing our oceans. It has fishing boats in every ocean of the world and it has become one of the most powerful fishing industries. Taiwan has made huge profits off the world’s fish resources, and continues to...

España: The Destructive Practices of Spain’s Fishing Armada

Publication | May 3, 2010 at 18:16

Spain is Europe’s largest fishing nation, whose fleet represents nearly one-fourth of the European Union’s total fishing capacity and receives the most subsidies in the European Union. Some of its vessels catch more than entire nation’s fishing...

The Application of CITES to Atlantic Bluefin Tuna and Other Marine Species

Publication | March 12, 2010 at 0:00

Looking at the implications of listing large ocean species like tuna and sharks to the CITES Appendices for endangered species.

CITES: Last Chance for Bluefin Tuna

Publication | March 12, 2010 at 0:00

Time is running out for Atlantic Bluefin Tuna as commercial mismanagement pushes the species to the brink of extinction.

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