Illegal fishing by massive Chinese fleet costs South American countries 8% to 15% of their catch [View all]
Oct 11, 2023 |
The Chinese fishing fleet has the worst reputation for illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing globally. It is notorious in South America. Nearly a third of its 3,000 ships operate in the region all year. Chasing migratory squid, they spend the first six months plundering the Atlantic waters off Argentina and the next six hoovering their Pacific catch near Ecuador and Peru, having gone around Chiles Strait of Magellan.
A Chinese fishing trawler operating near the Galapagos in 2020.
In the past decade, IUU fishing has depleted global stocks. It generates up to $36bn per year and accounts for one in every five fish eaten globally. That makes it the worlds sixth-largest illicit industry. In South America, IUU fishing strips countries of 8-15% of their annual catch, according to research by the American University in Washington. China accounts for three-quarters of foreign vessels in those waters.
The fleet is currently off Ecuadors coast.
Ecuador, Peru, the United States, and 11 other countries concluded their latest exercise against IUU fishing on September 30. They practiced intercepting ships to combat illegal fishing.
Ecuador and Peru have also built a coalition to address regional IUU fishing, recruiting Chile, Colombia, Panama, and Costa Rica. These countries publicly condemned Chinas incursion in 2020. iN 2021M they pledged to link their marine protected areas to form the worlds largest reserve, twice the size of Britain. Their governments lobbied the World Trade Organization for an agreement to cut fishing subsidies, which was adopted in 2022.
The US Coastguard began patrolling with Ecuadors navy in 2020. Since 2022, the US State Department HAS allocated nearly $30m for anti-IUU fishing programs.
More:
https://cuencahighlife.com/illegal-fishing-by-massive-chinese-fleet-costs-south-american-countries-8-to-15-of-their-catch/
A Chinese ship fishing off the west coast of South America in July 2021.Credit...Isaac Haslam/Sea Shepherd, via Associated Press
Chinese vessel Hua Xiang 801 as its being fired on by Argentine coast guard ship and maneuvering to get away. March 3 2019 | Photo: Noticias Argentinas
A Chinese fishing vessel working at night. Image by Simon Ager/Sea Shepherd.