Tuna talks look to cut down on overfishing Tokyo (AFP) March 26, 2008 Leading tuna consumers and producers met Wednesday to look at how to stop countries breaching quotas as a global fad for Japanese food drives tuna stocks to dangerously low levels. Amid environmentalists' warnings that tuna would eventually go extinct at current fishing rates, a 2006 deal agreed to cut the annual catch of bluefin tuna in the eastern Atlantic Ocean by one-fifth to 25,500 tonnes by 2010. The two-day informal meeting that opened in Tokyo of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas aims to address concerns that there is little enforcement of the quotas. "We will exchange views on how countries can keep their quotas, a problem which was revealed at the annual meeting last year," said an official of Japan's Fisheries Agency. The meeting includes countries and regions affected by the commission's quotas -- Canada, the European Commission, France, Japan, Libya, Morocco, Taiwan, Turkey and the United States. Industry bodies of fishermen, aqua farmers and traders are also joining the talks, according to Japan's Fisheries Agency. The Tokyo talks come ahead of the Atlantic tuna commission's next annual meeting in November, which is expected to look at toughening restrictions to ensure that quotas are met. A report issued in France last year said that France, Italy, Japan and Spain were guilty of the biggest violations of international quotas for bluefin tuna fishing. Italy fished 7,500 tonnes more than allowed in 2006, followed by France with 3,770 more and Japan with 3,550 tonnes, said the report by Roberto Mielgo Bregazzi, a consultant who has previously carried out research for the WWF. Japan is the largest consumer of tuna, which is prized for sushi and sashimi. Japanese food has gained in popularity across the world in recent years amid perceptions it is healthy. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology Are Organic Crops As Productive As Conventional Madison WI (SPX) Mar 26, 2008 Can organic cropping systems be as productive as conventional systems? The answer is an unqualified, "Yes" for alfalfa or wheat and a qualified "Yes most of the time" for corn and soybeans according to research reported by scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and agricultural consulting firm AGSTAT in the March-April 2008 issue of Agronomy Journal. |
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