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Pacific group seeks 30 percent cut in tuna catch

by Staff Writers
Majuro (AFP) Marshall Islands (AFP) Nov 27, 2010
An influential group of Pacific fishing nations called Saturday for a near-30 percent cut in next year's tuna catch next year as concern about over-fishing increases.

The eight members of the Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA) group control waters where a quarter of the world's tuna is caught.

At a meeting in Majuro, in the Marshall Islands, they agreed to cut licensed fishing days from 40,000 to 28,469 next year.

"There is more urgency than ever to protect fish stocks in the Pacific," said Marshall Islands Resources Minister Mattlan Zackhras.

"If we don't do anything as the resource owners, then we're not doing our part for future generations to benefit from the resource."

The PNA nations -- Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Palau, Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Kiribati and Tuvalu -- operate a system known as the "vessel day scheme", selling "fishing days" instead of licensing a set number of vessels to fish in the region.

But during the three years the scheme has been in place the scattering of tiny nations has had difficulty enforcing it, reducing its effectiveness for conservation.

"The islands have set hard limits but have had difficulty in actually doing it," said Phil Roberts of Tri-Marine International, one of the world's largest suppliers of tuna, who attended the talks in Majuro.

"The proposal to cut to 28,000 fishing days in 2011 means they will have to cut back a lot of boats. If they don't, they will never get fishing under control."

Zackhras said there is determination to reduce the level of fishing as research showed bigeye and yellowfin tuna -- favourites for Japan's sushi and sashimi markets -- are being overfished.

"There is a strong commitment from all countries," Zackhras said. "We will see a lot of changes in the coming year."



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WATER WORLD
Australia moves to protect bluefin tuna
Sydney (AFP) Nov 25, 2010
Australian has announced new measures to protect stocks of southern bluefin tuna, whose numbers are being threatened by the rising global popularity of sushi food. Environment Minister Tony Burke said the fish would be listed as "conservation-dependent", meaning it would be covered by new management plans to stop over-fishing. "While ongoing improvement in management measures are helping ... read more







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