Chinese Fishing Fleet Wreaks Havoc in Latin American Oceans 
By Julieta Pelcastre EC Source: dialogo-americas.com 2/9/2022
Julieta Pelcastre
This year will be no exception when it comes to the Chinese fishing fleet’s illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing practices in the territorial waters of Argentina, Chile, and Ecuador, the Argentine independent journalism site Urgente 24 said on January 3, 2022.

“It is estimated that 450 vessels will be in the Argentine sea for the season that begins [in January] and ends in April,” Urgente 24 reported. “In a short time, the number of vessels will likely reach 500. If one considers that each vessel could catch about 50 tons of squid per night, the economic damage is enormous,” the Argentine newspaper La Opinion Austral reported on January 14.

Foreign vessels illegally extract some 750,000 tons of fishery resources from Argentina’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ) each year, the nongovernmental organization (NGO) Argentine Society of Global Strategic Studies says on its website.
 

Depleting South America

The Chinese vessels spent the first half of 2021 in the Atlantic off the coast of Argentina, plundering squid stocks, illegally transferring fish between ships, and turning off transponders, the international investigative journalism organization InSight Crime said on December 23.

Meanwhile, the Chinese fishing fleet preys on the Argentine sea even during the closed season. “The Chinese fleet has been on the edge of the EEZ since late 2021, despite the Chinese government’s commitment to suspend squid fishing during the breeding and spawning season,” the Chilean newspaper Clarín reported.

Similarly, the fleet plundered important fishing areas bordering Chile and Ecuador in the Pacific. Its vessels have become expert at trawling just outside of the 200-nautical-mile EEZ zones of South American countries, catching fish by the millions, InSight Crime said.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4226Young fisherman, 13, reels in huge fish that weighs 46.9lbs and is as big as himdailymail2012-04-24UK
4227Salmon farms 'polluting' lochs in Scotlandbbc2012-04-20UK
4228Yellowfin tuna is enormous (427.9 pounds), but no recordpetethomasoutdoors2013-04-16MX
4229Belford man catches giant catfish at fishery in Thailandchroniclelive2013-11-07TH
4230RCMP call off river search for Fort Liard elderCBC News2011-06-02CA
4231Students monitor record coho salmon run in Millstone Riverviu2010-11-05CA
4232Salmon returning to Millstone Rivernanaimobulletin2013-11-07CA
4233Fishing season in Nanaimothenav2013-03-20CA
4234Из притоков Амура почти исчезла краснокнижная рыбаИА Амур.инфо2020-12-25RU
4235The fish caught in a Nigerian village is not worth millions of dollarsafp2021-03-09NI
4236Natural Water Flows To Be Restored To Theodosia Rivergov.bc2000-12-20CA
4237Revealed: 16 ‘toxic’ chemicals fish farmers are allowed to usetheferret2021-03-17UK
4238Man fined for selling fighting fish from his Ang Mo Kio flat, keeping bearded dragonschannelnewsasia2021-03-17SG
4239Ottawa announces $4.85M to buoy Nova Scotia’s struggling fish and seafood sectorglobalnews2021-03-17CA
4240North Sea gas leak fish 'untainted' by Total incidentheraldscotland2012-04-11UK
4241Vancouver Aquarium makes breakthrough in cod breedingthestar2012-04-03CA
4242Researchers To Examine The Effects Of Year-Old NOAA West Coast 'Catch Shares' Programunderwatertimes2012-03-21US
4243Anglers ruining Scots salmon DNA, claims scientistdeadlinenews2012-03-19UK
4244Bradley And Carr Catch Their Limits On Potomac, But Finish Mid-PackUnderwatertimes2012-03-18US
4245N.S. rejects calls for moratorium on fish farmingCBC News2012-03-15CA
4246Florida Law Makes Serving Local Fish an Increasing Challengebrowardpalmbeach2012-03-15US
4247Japan's Tsunami-Stricken Fishermen Chart New Course 2012-03-14JP
4248Malaysian fisherman released after three-and-half-year prison sentencethe borneo post2012-03-13MY
4249St. Lawrence River named best place to fish in the country 7 News2021-03-20US
4250Historic River Pollution Threatens Coastal Great Lakes FishAssociated Press2021-03-28US

215 216 217 169 of [218 - pages.]