UNEP-WCMC
Image from Secret Sea by Burt Jones & Maurine Shimlock
  home
  divers
  news
  log in | remind me?
enter your email
  enter password
Search Help
News | Previous Page | Suggest a story
03 March 2010 Global overfishing crisis, coming soon [Keyword: overfishing ]
New Zealand's commercial fisheries are under scrutiny as The End of the Line, the world's first major feature documentary revealing the devastating global impacts of overfishing, makes its New Zealand premiere this week.

Lauded at the Sundance film festival as the 'Inconvenient truth for the oceans', The End of the Line reveals how commercial fisheries are systematically over-exploiting our oceans for short term profit - and that left unchecked, scientists predict this will cause the global collapse of fish stocks.

New Zealand's leading marine advocates from Greenpeace, WWF, Forest & Bird and ECO warn that some of New Zealand's commercial fisheries are part of the global overfishing crisis revealed by the film, and that the full extent of the overfishing crisis in New Zealand is unknown. At the film's premiere tomorrow (news eds: Thursday) the environmental groups will call for an end to unsustainable fishing in New Zealand's waters.

"We often hear from the fishing industry and Government that our fisheries are the best managed in the world but as The End of the Line shows, this is because of the dire state of fisheries elsewhere," they said in a joint press release.

"Since 1950, one in four of the world's fisheries have collapsed, which means the population is so small it may never recover to its former numbers. Here in New Zealand we are not immune - at least one third of the assessed stocks under the quota management system are defined as depleted or collapsed .

They cited the collapse and closure of three of the eight orange roughy fisheries as an example of QMS failure. They were also critical of the current Ministry of Fisheries proposal to increase the quota for southern bluefin tuna, listed as critically endangered, by 25 per cent when, globally, catches should cease until stocks recover.

"Under the Ministry of Fisheries own Harvest Strategy Standard, this species would already be classified as collapsed and be considered for closure .

"We are calling for the fishing industry and the Government to take an honest look at where our fisheries are heading. They have a responsibility to safeguard our oceans and ensure there is still fish for future generations of Kiwis to eat, by moving to genuinely sustainable methods of fishing, and reducing destructive methods such as bottom trawling and dredging."

Al Brown, co-owner of the Wellington restaurant Logan Brown, presenter on Hunger For the Wild and author of Go Fish is amongst celebrities attending the NZ premiere. He said: "The End of the Line is a brilliant film. We need to get back to only taking what we need from nature, and this film shows us just how high the stakes are - we could be facing a future without fish. To me, as a fisherman and a chef, that's unthinkable."

The New Zealand premiere of The End of the Line starts at 7.15pm, Thursday 4 March, Wellington, The Paramount, Courtenay Place, Wellington

The End of the Line is screening as part of the Documentary Edge Film festival in Auckland this week at 1.15pm, Saturday 6 March 2010, Rialto Cinema, Newmarket, Auckland.

Source: scoop.co.nz
Similiar Stories in the earthdive news database:
08 March 2009: Overfishing 'imperils' ocean life
The stars of the ocean - bluefin tuna, salmon, whales and seabirds - suffer from dwindling food supplies as a result of heavy fishing driven by the demands of fish farms and climate change, according to a study released Monday.
09 July 2007: Save the World from Overfishing
Global fishing stocks are in trouble. After expanding from 18 millions tons in 1950 to around 94 million tons in 2000, annual world fish catch has leveled off and may even be declining.
16 April 2007: Overfishing large sharks
Fewer big sharks in the oceans mean fewer bay scallops and other shellfish, according to an article in the journal Science, tying two unlikely links in the food web to the same fate.
22 March 2007: Nat Geo warns of Global Overfishing
As National Geographic devotes its April issue to the global fisheries crisis, destructive fishing practices and ineffective fisheries management, the NFMS implements new rules to stop overfishing and rebuild depleted fish populations.
20 February 2007: Overfishing Imperils Deep Water Fish
With declining catches close to shore, commercial fishing is turning to deeper waters, threatening species that live in the cold and gloom of the deep oceans, according to researchers.
16 October 2006: Japan caught overfishing Bluefin tuna
While Federal Cabinet ponders the conservation of resources and productivity on the land, Japan has been caught out cheating on the world's ocean resources. It's been dragged into line by other fishing nations after it was found to have plundered the world's stocks of southern bluefin tuna.
02 April 2006: Overfishing still threatens fish populations
Overfishing is still a problem along the southern Atlantic coast, according to a new report from an environmental coalition. Almost a hundred species of fish could be caught along the southern Atlantic coast, but only 7 percent of those species are known to be at healthy levels
15 January 2006: Overfishing more damaging than tsunami
Overfishing and destructive methods, such as cyanide and blast fishing, continue to threaten the health of coral reefs in Aceh, the epicentre of the fourth largest earthquake in history, according to a comprehensive report released today by Reef Check, the global coral reef conservation organization.
27 August 2004: Taiwan overfishing blamed for low tuna catches
Tuna catches in Japan's coastal waters have sharply decreased apparently due to overfishing in the Pacific Ocean by Taiwanese fishing companies that are using large fishing vessels in violation of a regional conservation agreement, according to the Fisheries Agency and other sources.
Previous Year | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Current

  Get this as an RSS Feed

Subscribe to this feed

You can subscribe to this RSS feed in a number of ways, including the following:

  • Drag the orange RSS button into your News Reader
  • Drag the URL of the RSS feed into your News Reader
  • Cut and paste the URL of the RSS feed into your News Reader