EU position on blue fin tuna ban debated Tuesday

Published: 9 February 2010 y., Tuesday

Didžioji baltoji meška
The fate of blue fin tuna hangs in the balance this week as a complete ban on the trade is debated by MEPs. Ahead of a meeting of the Convention for the Protection of Endangered Species (CITES) the European Union must thrash out a position on whether to support a ban proposed by Monaco. The Union is divided although recently two key states, France and Italy, have swung around behind stopping the trade. The debate on Tuesday will be crucial to establishing a consensus.
Blue fin tuna has been fished for millennia although scientific data has shown that between 1997-2007 stocks in the Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean declined by 60%.

About three quarters of all Atlantic Tuna ends up on the plates of Japanese restaurants and homes as sushi and sashimi. Blue fin tuna is the most popular and endanged species of tuna.

The role of the UN body CITES is to regulate trade in animal and plants that are endangered. The fate of polar bears, African elephants and tigers will also be discussed when its 175 members meet in Doha in March. The European Commission, which runs EU fisheries policy, has already recommended adding blue fin tuna to the CITES list.

"All or nothing decision"

The Chair of Parliament's Environment Committee, German Socialist Jo Leinen told us that "blue fin tuna is seriously under threat of extinction. The EU needs to act quickly and stand up for a temporary trade ban at the CITES conference in Qatar".

Speaking ahead of the debate Saskia Richartz of Greenpeace commented: "This is an all or nothing decision: either we save the blue fin now or we almost certainly condemn the species to extinction”.

However, Mourad Kahoul of the Euro-Mediterranean Professional Fishers of Tuna Association said: "The biological criteria of CITES necessary to integrate blue fin tuna into the list of endangered species have not been met. Including blue fin tuna on the list of endangered species would be an irresponsible act by European policy makers".

Small scale fishing still possible with ban

If the trade is listed by CITES as being prohibited then only small-scale tuna fisheries would be allowed - such as tuna traps, with the produce still being sold.

Watch the debate live online from Strasbourg Tuesday afternoon from 1500 CET .

 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

How should we help balance family and career?

Equal opportunities for men and women, equal pay for equal work, freedom from unfair discrimination: these are fundamental European values. more »

A celebration of... SPAM?

SPAM Museum in Austin, Minnesota, a.k.a. Spamtown USA gives you a sense of the cult SPAM ham. more »

Books by Bali bombers being sold

Even though the Indonesian government has tried to stop The Martyrs' Trilogy publication, some copies of are personal writings by each of the three executed Bali bombers are being sold quietly in small book shops and stalls. more »

The European ombudsman at your service

If you think the EU institutions have made a mistake or failed to follow their own rules, you can ask the European ombudsman to investigate on your behalf. more »

Indian gaming gets political

7Seas Technologies Limited the creators of the political games came up with the idea to raise political awareness ahead of the elections. more »

For sale: one English village

The charitable trust which owns the whole of Linkenholt in the southern county of Hampshire wants to sell up the archetypal English village and use its money elsewhere. more »

Butcher fest in Hungary

In the butcher's festival in a village in eastern Hungary, the best butchers in the land gather to compete in speedy cutting, slicing and meat processing. more »

Reality tv star's cancer ordeal

The world's most famous reality TV star Jade Goody is dying of cancer. more »

Would you help a Jew?, asks WW2 show

It looks like a relic from the second world war but 'The Bunker' is in fact a brand new museum. more »

How safe is your pension?

The financial crisis may force EU countries to adjust pension systems. more »