By Megan O'Neill
The global fishing industry is a cloudy animal of the high seas.
The global fishing industry is a cloudy animal of the high seas.
The traceability
of seafood from international waters to an American plate is a difficult web of
confusion, and black market fishing—or what we should correctly refer to as illegal,
unreported or unregulated (IUU) fishing—blurs the waters. But there’s hope for
the American fisheries unfairly competing with IUU and fraudulent practices. And
there’s hope for those consumers, chefs and buyers simply looking for transparency
in seafood.
Earlier
this month at the Seafood
Expo North America, the Department of State and the National Oceanic
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
announced an action plan for the implementation of recommendations to combat IUU
fishing and seafood fraud. The recommendations were given by a 19-agency
Presidential Task Force that was established by President Obama to create a
comprehensive framework to oust the IUU fishing that thoroughly impacts the
economic and environmental sustainability of U.S. and global fisheries.
The
action plan spells out each forceful step, 15 in total, that federal agencies
will take in both domestic and international settings as the Obama
administration works to support sustainable fisheries and keep the American fishing
industry strong.
In
short, IUU fishing consists of fishing activities that are illegal (conducted
in breach of applicable laws), unreported (not reported or misreported to
relevant authorities in breach of reporting procedures), or unregulated (occurring
in areas in which there are no applicable conservation measures). According to
the report, which you can read in full here,
the task force was established for two reasons: 1. to address this IUU fishing
and 2. to address seafood fraud, both of which refer to all seafood species,
not just fish. The Task Force includes a diverse group of members—Department of
Homeland Security, U.S. Agency for International Development, the Food and Drug
Administration, the Department of Defense and more.
So why, might
you ask, would one require a 19-agency Presidential Task Force for recommendations
on illegal fishing practices? It’s a fair question, but one that can be readily
answered. By circumventing conservation and management measures and engaging in
these fraudulent practices, the health of the general ecosystem is greatly
impacted, and the sustainability of U.S. and global fish stocks is seriously undermined.
In its 2015
biennial report to congress, NOAA highlighted
their findings and analyses of foreign IUU fishing activities on the high seas
where nations do not have a regulatory program comparable to the United States.
What’s astounding in their research is IUU’s incredible impact on the
economic stability of the industry.
According
to NOAA, global losses from illegal fishing practices are estimated between $10
and $23 billion annually.
But
beyond the loss of money, and simply because of the massive oceanic nature, IUU
fishing is difficult to place. “It can occur in capture fisheries both within
areas of national jurisdiction and on the high seas,” stated the Presidential
Task Force Report.
As the
conclusion of a yearlong
investigation by the Associated Press surfaces, American interest in the international
seafood supply chain strengthens. The AP’s article, which was posted last week,
brought to light modern day slave labor conditions in Indonesian fisheries. “Are
slaves catching the fish you buy?” headlined the piece. It’s a clouded seafood
supply chain, and according to the AP, tainted seafood mixes in with other fish at a number of sites in
Thailand, including processing plants. It’s a jarring thought,
and although extreme, it proves the need for higher regulation and transparency
in the fishing supply chain in international waters.
“Because
more than 2.5 billion people depend upon fish for food and nutrition, IUU
fishing practices threaten food security and sustainability and undermine
efforts to reduce global hunger and malnutrition,” stated the report.
According to
NOAA, nearly 90 percent of the seafood consumed in the United States is imported.
Beyond that, China, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam and Ecuador are where we’re
importing from. A greater understanding of where our fish come from (increasing
required information available on seafood products) is one of the four general
themes of the Task Force’s plan.
Port
sale measures, free trade agreements, fishery subsidies, and best practices for
data tracking are among the 15 recommendations, broad in scope, provided to the
administration by the Task Force. Others
include expanded federal, state and local enforcement provisions and
information sharing and traceability programs.
The
traceability system attempts to give chefs and consumers purchasing seafood in the
American market an increasing confidence in the sustainability of the market.
Though ambitious, it aims to track every piece of seafood that enters U.S.
commerce from where it is caught to where it lands in the United States.
According to the report, implementation
by September 2016 should trace all at-risk seafood (or products of particular concern) through data tracking.
The
actions of the task force announced at the Seafood Expo might certainly give
American buyers a peace of mind and hope for a future that truly combats
questionable imports. Timelines are available for each of the 15
recommendations, and reassure the government’s commitment to not only leveling
the playing field for U.S. fishers who are unfairly competing with illegal
catch and seafood products, but also providing buyers with the ability to
trace, the ability to trust and the ability to eat a piece of seafood that is
correctly and ethically represented.
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