This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/sci/tech/8560896.stm
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
EU to back bluefin tuna trade ban | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
EU nations have decided to support a ban on international trade in Atlantic bluefin tuna until stocks recover. | |
The bloc has agreed to back a motion for a ban during next week's meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). | |
The US has already given its support, but Japan - where most bluefin is eaten - may opt out of CITES controls. | |
The EU is backing exemptions for traditional fishers, and deferring the ban for a year. | |
Malta was reportedly the only EU member to vote against supporting the ban proposal, which was originally lodged by Monaco last year. | |
Conservation groups were generally pleased. | |
We have long argued that this threatened species should be given the protection it urgently needs Huw Irranca-Davies, UK Marine and Natural Environment Minister | |
"With the two largest holders of bluefin tuna fishing quota on either side of the Atlantic - the US and EU - now supporting the trade ban, other countries should follow suit," said Sergi Tudela, head of WWF's Mediterranean fisheries campaign. | |
"The EU must now push for widespread support of this proposal during the CITES meeting." | |
UK Marine and Natural Environment Minister Huw Irranca-Davies also welcomed the move. | |
"We have long argued that this threatened species should be given the protection it urgently needs," he said. | |
Change of heart | |
Last year, scientists reporting to the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (Iccat) - the organisation responsible for managing the fishery - said the bluefin's decline had been so stark that a trade ban was merited. | |
They calculated that the stock is now at about 15% of the level it was in the era before industrial fishing began. | |
The plight of the bluefin | |
Iccat's member states, however - which include EU nations with tuna fleets such as Spain, France and Italy - decided to continue fishing, but with lowered quotas. | |
Initially, those three countries along with Cyprus and Greece had lobbied against a CITES ban, but have now changed their positions. | |
Compensation packages, as yet unpublicised, have been offered to operators of the EU tuna fleet, which is now dominated by modern, industrial boats. | |
Conservationists are less happy with three elements of the EU proposition: | |
| |
Dodging the issue | |
EU support alone will not secure approval for the ban within CITES, where motions need a two-thirds majority to pass. | |
At the last meeting, in 2007, Japan and other nations opposed to using CITES to regulate commercial fish species blocked measures aimed at safeguarding sharks. | |
CITES EXPLAINED Threatened organisms listed on three appendices depending on level of riskAppendix 1 - all international trade bannedAppendix 2 - international trade monitored and regulatedAppendix 3 - trade bans by individual governments, others asked to assist"Uplisting" - moving organism to a more protective appendix; "downlisting" - the reverseConferences of the Parties (COPs) held every three yearsCITES administered by UN Environment Programme (Unep) | |
Japan is not opposed to bluefin conservation, but believes such matters should be regulated by regional fisheries bodies such as Iccat. | |
Japanese officials have blamed European governments for the bluefin's decline, arguing that governments have allocated unfeasibly large quotas to their fleets and turned a blind eye to illegal fishing. | |
Most bluefin is sold to Japan for use in sushi and sashimi restaurants. | |
Under a CITES ban, EU member states would not be allowed to export bluefin caught in their waters, and would not be able to fish in international waters. | |
CITES rules allow any country to lodge a "reservation" against measures it does not like, thereby opting out. Japan has indicated it may take this option if the meeting endorses a trade ban on bluefin | |
Conservationists and some EU states are concerned that other Iccat countries around the Mediterranean - the principal fishing ground - could also opt out of a CITES ban. | |
That would allow those countries to continue fishing and exporting the tuna to Japan. | That would allow those countries to continue fishing and exporting the tuna to Japan. |
The CITES meeting, in Qatar, opens this weekend. | The CITES meeting, in Qatar, opens this weekend. |
Richard.Black-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk |