Fish piracy costs $10 billion to $23 billion a year -report

WASHINGTON, May 8:  Fish piracy – seafood  caught illegally, not reported to authorities or outside environmental and catch regulations – represents as much as $10 billion to 23 billion dollars in global losses each year, a non-profit conservation group estimated today.
Because pirated fish is sold on black markets, specifics of the economic impact are tough to decipher. But Oceana, a Washington-based organization, looked at the records of fish catches by country as reported to the United Nations, then compared those statistics to seafood sales in various world markets.
When these numbers didn’t match up, the group estimated the amount lost through fish piracy, a practice that US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration administrator Jane Lubchenco has called “one of the most serious threats to American fishing jobs and fishing communities.”
The report said illegal trade could account for 11 million to 25 million metric tons of seafood, a minimum of 20 per cent of seafood worldwide.
Illegal fishing targets some of the most expensive species, including shrimp, fugu pufferfish, lobster, whole abalone and sea urchin uni. Penalties are often a fraction of potential profit, the report found. In one US case, an illegal catch worth up to 1 million dollars brought a 3,5000 dollars penalty.
The report estimated that illegal trade threatens 260 million jobs dependant on marine fisheries.
For example, the shark fin trade in Hong Kong suggests that three to four times more sharks are being killed than official reports say, with 292 million dollars to 476 dollars worth of shark fins sold.
Oceana said that Florida law enforcement agents’ estimates showed that one illegal operator stole $1,400 a week from legal operators by exceeding the catch limit on king mackerel.
Fishermen who comply with legal standards can also lose business when they sell in the same market as illegal operators who don’t follow environmental or sanitary standards, the report found.
In addition, adults and children have been trafficked into service on illegal fishing ships, making a catch more lucrative, the report said.
(AGENCIES)