5 Dec 2017

Call for Pacific to speak up on threat to fishing grounds

5:08 pm on 5 December 2017

Fiji's fisheries minister Semi Koroilavesau says Pacific tuna is under threat from the world's largest fishing nations including China, Japan and South Korea.

Release of a yellowfin tuna tagged with an archival tag.

Release of a yellowfin tuna tagged with an archival tag. Photo: SPC/FABIEN FORGET

He is critical of what he said was the inaction of the Western and Central Pacific Fishing Commission in controlling overfishing in the high seas and the low catches within regional fisheries zones.

Mr Koroilavesau told the annual meeting of the Tuna Commission in Pasay City in the Philippines that Fiji does not want to see this continue as the country's fishery may collapse under the pressure.

Man guides frozen tuna down a slide to waiting container

Frozen tuna are unloaded in Fiji from Taiwanese vessel Photo: RNZ / Philippa Tolley

The Tuna Commission makes its decision by consensus and easily deadlocked by recalcitrant fishing nations.

The Forum Fisheries Agency's director-general, James Movick, said there was a need for the region to confront the distant water fishing nations.

Mr Movick said the time had come to step up conversations around the economics of tuna and what countries, thinking regionally, are prepared to take - and give - so that the Pacific can protect its fisheries resource, and achieve its economic aspirations.

tuna

Photo: RNZ / Philippa Tolley

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