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Pacific islands act to save tuna

Fishy business: Stolen Pacific tuna in the European market

25 September 2007

New evidence gathered by Greenpeace and presented in this report shows that part of the tuna fleet licensed to fish in the Eastern Pacific - and linked to the European market - has become involved in illegal, unregulated and unreported (IUU) fishing activities, also known as pirate fishing, in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean – one of the last remaining large tuna fisheries on the planet.

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The mismanagement of the bluefin tuna fishery in the Mediterranean

15 November 2006

Over the past few decades, the inability of Governments to guarantee the sustainable exploitation of bluefin tuna stocks in different parts of the world has resulted in their severe depletion. Overfishing has already led to important decreases in bluefin tuna catches from the southern bluefin tuna stock (Thunnus maccoyii) in the South Pacific and from the western stock of the northern bluefin tuna population (Thunnus thynnus) in the West Atlantic, which is now the subject of a strict recovery plan. With the decline in catches in these two fisheries, the eastern stock of the northern bluefin tuna population has become the most important bluefin tuna fishery worldwide. Catches in this fishery take place mainly in the Mediterranean Sea.

Earlier this year, Greenpeace presented a detailed report about the state of the northern bluefin tuna population, with a particular focus on the eastern stock. The report “Where have all the tuna gone? How tuna ranching and pirate fishing are wiping out Mediterranean bluefin tuna”, analyses the state of this sub-population as well as the causes of its present mismanagement, particularly in the Mediterranean region.

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Plundering the Pacific

23 October 2006

Greenpeace and fisheries authorities from Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) and Kiribati have, over the course of seven weeks, undertaken joint surveillance and enforcement exercises in the Pacific. The work included patrolling the exclusive economic zones (EEZ) of both nations, and boarding and inspecting fishing vessels found in these areas. The collaboration has exposed some key findings about the nature of illegal, unreported and unregulated IUU fishing in the Pacific.

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Pacific Tuna – Stolen Fish, Stolen Futures

31 August 2006

The Western and Central Pacific, home to over 20 island nations and coastal states, is the world’s largest tuna fishery. More than half of the tuna consumed worldwide comes from here. Of all the fish stocks in the Pacific, tuna is by far the most important, bringing income to over 30,000 people, and worth at least seven times as much as any other.

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