Oceana estimates illegal swordfish landings cost Italy more than €25 million every year
Press Release Date: September 24, 2015
Location: Madrid
Contact:
Marta Madina | email: mmadina@oceana.org | tel.: Marta Madina
Oceana deplores that the European Union continues to ignore Mediterranean swordfish overfishing despite world renowned fisheries scientists pointing out that Italy has failed to report around 41,000 tons in total for 20 years. This amounts to more than €25 million a year and 15% of all catches of this species in the Mediterranean, highlighting the severe overfishing the stock has being suffering for three decades now. The stock is under serious threat if illegal fishing is not curbed and catches are not regulated to enable its recovery.
“The science is clear: the situation for Mediterranean swordfish is critical and shows no signs of improvement”, says Lasse Gustavsson, Executive Director of Oceana in Europe. “Unlike the managed Atlantic stock, Mediterranean swordfish suffers from enduring overfishing, illegal fishing and a serious lack of political willingness to address the problem. We expect better from the European Union – the main culprit of the stock’s depletion – especially considering that the EU is committed and obliged to ensure fisheries are sustainable by 2020”
Mediterranean swordfish has declined by about two thirds from the early 80s and 2013 witnessed the lowest ever total annual catch on record. Moreover, 72% of the declared landings are juvenile – specimens that hadn’t had the chance to reproduce – further affecting the recovery of this highly overfished stock.
Mediterranean swordfish plays an important socio-economic role in many Mediterranean coastal communities and Italy is the leading country in the fishery. However, (as revealed by Oceana last year) illegally-caught swordfish continues to blatantly enter local Italian markets at elevated prices of up to €30/kg – the EU is fully aware of this but has so far refused to act.
In November, the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), the Regional Fisheries Management Organisation in charge of managing highly migratory species such as the Mediterranean swordfish, will be meeting in Malta in which Mediterranean swordfish will be part of the negotiations. Oceana urges Mediterranean Member States and the EU to propose and ensure the adoption and implementation of a proper Mediterranean swordfish recovery plan that can rebuild the stock to sustainable levels (MSY) by 2020.
Learn more: Swordfish