Bid to grant MSC 'ecolabel' to bluefin tuna fishery raises fears for ‘king of fish’ 
By Karen McVeigh US Source: the guardian 6/1/2020
Karen McVeigh
Credit: Pablo Blázquez Domínguez/Getty
A decade ago, the highly prized “king of fish”, the bluefin tuna, was taken off menus in high-end restaurants and shunned by top chefs, amid warnings by environmentalists that it was being driven to extinction. Recent assessments of eastern Atlantic bluefin tuna, which can grow to the size of a small car and live for up to 40 years, have shown much healthier populations.

But now conservationists and scientists are warning that the largest and most valuable tuna species could once again be under threat if a Japanese bluefin fishery in the eastern Atlantic Ocean is awarded an internationally recognised “ecolabel” they claim is based on flawed science.
 

On Monday 1 June, an independent judge will hear evidence from the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the Pew Charitable Trusts, the Japanese fishery and assessors for the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), to help determine whether the assessors were right to recommend the fishery receives its label. If approved, the Japanese company Usufuku Honten can sell the first ever MSC-certified bluefin tuna to consumers, marking it as a well-managed sustainable fishery.

WWF and Pew will argue strongly against the award, saying it is too early to declare that the bluefin tuna stock is fully recovered. They have identified a “number of shortfalls” in the assessment process and say there has been a lack of impartiality.

 
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News Id SourceStampcountry
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1977Plummeting salmon population could trigger closure of fishing season in California waterslatimes2023-03-02US
1978Owner of fishing boat missing at sea suffers theft of fish potsloopnews2023-03-03UK
1979Hydropower killing, injuring and trapping fish by the tonnemsn2023-03-06US
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1981José Andrés Wants You to Eat More Lionfishfoodandwine2023-02-28US
1982Freshwater Fish Are a ‘Significant Source’ of Forever Chemicalssentientmedia2023-02-28US
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1984Louisiana fishermen film chaotic shark feeding frenzyFOX 13 News2023-03-01US
1985Two coal and mining companies are said to be responsible for the death of fishindonewyork2023-03-02DE
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1989Bangladesh bans suckermouth catfish in light of threats to native fish speciesmongabay2023-02-23ID
199016-crew tuna fishing vessel missing in Indian oceanfleetmon2023-02-24TW
1991Customer urges people to buy miserable fishkentlive2023-02-24UK
1992Fish tested in two Michigan rivers contain ‘forever chemicals’, harmful on consumptionNew Delhi2023-02-25US
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199458 million salmon died in Norwegian fish farms last yearsciencenorway2023-02-24NO
1995Cuyahoga River tributary West Creek to become more fish friendlycleveland2023-02-11US
1996Scripps Oceanography researchers discover new species of deep-sea fishlajollalight2023-02-12CR
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1999Ade Alakija: the man who took Nigeria's catfish sector to a new levelthefishsite2023-03-15NG
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