The Future of Sustainable Fishing: More Oversight and Lower Yields 
By Sam Markert US Source: earth.org 6/20/2024
Sam Markert
To prevent the collapse of wild fishing stocks and preserve ecological sustainability, states will need to expand oversight, increase compliance with international agreements, and recognize a lower carrying capacity within their fisheries.
 

The proportion of wild fishery stocks exploited at biologically unsustainable levels has been increasing for the past four decades. As measured by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) across their 17 Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs), 35.4% of managed fisheries were considered to be unsustainably exploited in 2019. Only 64.6% are fished at what is commonly referred to as the maximum sustainable yield (MSY), down from 90% in 1974. The World Bank estimate of 90% of global fisheries being fully exploited or overfished is just as dire, explaining the overall decline in fish catches.

 
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