Climate and Nature

It’s time for governments to crack down on illegal fishing in the Pacific. Here’s how

A pot filled with anchovies is seen aboard a fishing boat at the Pacific Ocean, off of Peru's northern port of Chimbote, December 14, 2012. Peru is the world's top fishmeal exporter, producing about a third of worldwide supply. Last year it shipped abroad more than $2 billion in fishmeal and fish oil. The anchovy pulled from Peru's Pacific Ocean is sold as fishmeal that feeds pigs in China and farmed salmon in Europe. It's also squeezed into increasingly popular Omega-3 supplements. The government cut its quota for this summer's anchovy season by 68 percent to 810,000 tonnes, the smallest allowance in 25 years. Picture taken December 14, 2012. REUTERS/Enrique Castro-Mendivil (PERU - Tags: ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY) illegal fishing

Illegal fishing threatens the food and livelihoods that the Pacific provides for millions of people Image: REUTERS/Enrique Castro-Mendivil

Jim Leape
Core Team, Blue Food Assessment; Member of Friends of Ocean Action; Co-Director, Stanford Center for Ocean Solutions
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Parties to the Agreement on Port State Measures (PSMA)
Parties to the Agreement on Port State Measures (PSMA) Image: FAO, United Nations Geospatial
The Asian Pacific and the Atlantic off the coast of West Africa are are the places where illegal fishing is causing the biggest revenue losses for local economies
Where is illegal fishing causing the biggest revenue losses for local economies? Image: Statista
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