Greenpeace welcomes European Commission support for international bluefin tuna trade ban
08 September 2009by eub2 -- last modified 08 September 2009
Greenpeace welcomes the European Commission’s decision today to support a ban on the international trade of North Atlantic and Mediterranean bluefin tuna.
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The Commission is calling for bluefin tuna to be classified as an
endangered species under the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES). This classification would effectively
suspend the international trade in bluefin tuna until the species is no
longer threatened with extinction.
“Bluefin tuna populations have fallen to critically low levels.
Anyone who is opposed to the proposed trade ban is clearly putting
short-term commercial interests above the survival of the species,"
said Saskia Richartz, EU Oceans Policy Director.
The proposal to list bluefin tuna as an endangered species was
originally tabled by Monaco in July at the International Commission for
the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), the inter-governmental body
responsible for the conservation of tuna, in response to critically low
and overfished stocks. French President Nicolas Sarkozy led calls
supporting the proposal by Monaco. Several other EU countries,
including the UK, the Netherlands, Germany, Poland and Austria, have
also backed the move.[1]
“Bluefin tuna has become endangered because of disgraceful fisheries
management in the EU. The suspension of trade is a last resort and it
merely buys the EU time to put its fisheries management in order,”
said Richartz.
The Greenpeace European Unit is based in Brussels, where we monitor and analyse the work of the institutions of the European Union, expose deficient EU policies and laws, and challenge decision-makers to implement progressive solutions.
Greenpeace European Unit