Greenpeace ship sails to protect threatened Pacific tuna stocks
Auckland, 27 August 2009 - The Greenpeace ship Esperanza is sailing to the Western and Central Pacific Ocean to protect
threatened Pacific tuna stocks (1), as the fishing industry reports record catches.
The aim of the campaign is to cut tuna fishing in the region by 50 per cent and to close four areas of international
waters to all fishing and have them designated as marine reserves (2).
Over half the world's tuna is caught in the Pacific, with the vast majority taken by distant water fishing nations from
Asia, the US and Europe. Despite agreements to reduce tuna catches to combat overfishing; an estimated 2,426,195 metric
tonnes of tuna was caught in the Pacific in 2008 - the highest annual catch on record (3). The countries with highest
tuna catch are the Philippines, Japan, Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan and the USA. China and Spain are also showing a
steady increase in catch sizes.
"Pacific tuna stocks are in crisis, and it is appalling that instead of reducing their tuna catches, fishing fleets are
increasing their plunder of the Pacific. The fishing industry is in danger of fishing itself to death," said Karli
Thomas, Greenpeace New Zealand oceans campaigner, on board the Esperanza.
"The only way to stop this rush to fish out what's left of the tuna on our planet is to urgently cut, by half, the level
of fishing across the region and to close all four pockets of international waters in the Pacific to all fishing, and
declare them as marine reserves."
During the expedition, Greenpeace will ensure that international tuna fleets adhere to the two-month ban on purse seine
fleets using fish aggregation devices (FADs), which are responsible for wasteful bycatch of juvenile tuna and other
endangered marine life such as sharks and turtles. The Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (4), (popularly
known as the Pacific Tuna Commission), has instituted the FAD ban during August and September.
Greenpeace's "Defending Our Pacific" tour aims to demand the protection of Pacific tuna through the establishment of
marine reserves spanning the four pockets of international waters in the Pacific Ocean, and ensuring sustainable levels
of fishing outside of these areas. The proposed areas are home to endangered leatherback turtles, as well as minke and
sperm whales, and other deep-sea life and provide vital feeding and breeding areas for the region's lifeline - tuna.
Last year, the Pacific Tuna Commission agreed to close two of these areas to all tuna purse seining, the main fishing
method used in the Pacific, from January 2010 onwards. In addition, at a meeting in May 2009 Pacific Island nations
supported in principle the closure of all four pockets of international waters. The Commission will have the opportunity
to close all four pockets of international waters to all fishing at its December meeting.
"Protecting these areas from fishing is vital to the future of the Pacific Ocean and the many countries that depend on
it for their food and livelihoods," said Josua Turaganivalu, Greenpeace Australia Pacific oceans campaigner, onboard the
Esperanza. "In addition purse seining with FADs must be banned globally."
Greenpeace is campaigning for a global network of fully protected marine reserves covering 40 per cent of our oceans as
an essential way to protect our seas from the ravages of climate change, to restore the health of fish stocks, and
protect ocean life from habitat destruction and collapse.
ENDS