Greenpeace sounds
the alarm on the state of tuna, calls for action to ensure a
sustainable tuna industry
By GREENPEACE
September 8, 2013
GENERAL SANTOS CITY,
Philippines – Greenpeace today warned major tuna industry players that
unless drastic measures are put into place to halt the decline of the
world’s tuna stocks there will be no future for their multi-billion
peso businesses.
“The government should
ensure sustainability in our seas so that tuna fisheries can continue,
securing the livelihood of millions of fisherfolk,” said Mark Dia,
Regional Oceans Campaigner for Greenpeace Southeast Asia.
Speaking during the 15th
Tuna Congress in the country’s tuna capital, Dia said, “instead of
pursuing ever-increasing tuna catches and opening up new fishing
grounds, the Philippine government needs to direct its support to
shift the tuna industry and prop up existing sustainable methods in
catching tuna.”
Scientists have long called
for further protection of the region’s valuable big eye and yellow fin
tuna stocks. Unless measures are taken, such as reducing the catches
of juvenile tuna caught by using fish aggregation devices (FAD) the
stocks will continue to drop.
Tuna need at least two to
three years to grow to maturity, so if most of the catch is juvenile
tuna, fish stocks will not be able to replenish themselves. The
decline in these fish stocks is already hurting longline and handline
fleets. Evidence of this is already clear in the traditional tuna
fishing areas south of Mindanao where tuna are getting smaller and
harder to catch.
“Without strong action to
stop overfishing and overcapacity in the fleets, which means that
there are already many boats catching fish, fishing companies as well
as coastal communities will suffer huge losses as the stocks decline
and fleets will be forced to move elsewhere,” said Sari Tolvanen,
Oceans Campaigner for Greenpeace International.
Tolvanen added, “a
precautionary approach must be taken now, before it is too late. The
problem is that efforts at fisheries management have fallen short of
what is required.”
The Alliance of Tuna
Handliners echoed Greenpeace’s concern about current unsustainable
fishing practices that jeopardize the future of the industry. “Our
livelihoods are already threatened. The hook and line tuna industry is
being sacrificed for canned tuna,” said Raul Gonzales, spokesperson
for the group.
“Therefore, we ask that the
government act now to ensure that juvenile tuna catches in the purse
seine fisheries are reduced. Urgent reduction in excess purse seine
fishing capacity must also be implemented.”
The problem of big eye tuna
overfishing was discussed at the recently concluded Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC) workshop held in Japan,
of which the Philippines is a member. A proposal to extend the FAD ban
in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean from the current 4 months to
at least 5 months has been broadly agreed, but the Philippines has
said that it wants to be exempted from having to further restrict FAD
use.
“Instead of continuously
trying to seek exceptions to conservation measures, the Philippines
should instead work more closely with the rest of the Pacific region
and help put in place strong science based management measures that
can help stop overfishing,” stressed Dia.