WWF International has called on the International Convention for the Conservation of  the Atlantic Tuna (ICCAT) to impose a ban on catching the bluefin tuna, as well as a ban on trading in it. ICCAT is holding its 21st regular meeting in Recife, Brazil Monday 9 November. It meets to decide on whether to heed its own scientists’ calls to end its members’ fishing of the bluefin tuna, stocks of which are close to collapse in the Eastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean.

Monaco proposed 14 October that the bluefin tuna be placed on the CITES list of endangered species banned from international trade. A CITES ban on the trade in ivory in 1989 is credited with saving African elephant populations.

European tuna fleets export most of their catch to Japan, the world’s largest importer of tunafish.

WWF International joined Greenpeace 28 October to call on the organization to heed its scientists’ findings, pleas that have largely gone unheeded in the past. A single bluefin tuna sold for $173,000 in January 2009. In 2007, it is estimated that the tuna catch was 61,000 tonnes, more than twice the quota fixed by ICCAT.

Posted by :: Sean Ecker on 9 November 2009 at 20:10 | permalink
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News story, GenevaLunch, 9 November 2009.

Filed under: World news

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3 Responses to “Last chance for bluefin tuna: ICCAT meets in Recife, Brazil”

  1. GenevaLunch » Blog Archive » Bluefin tuna given no respite by fisheries body Says:

    [...] “Last chance for bluefin tuna: ICCAT meets in Recife, Brazil“, 9 November 2009, GenevaLunch, “Give the bluefin tuna a chance“, 8 November [...]

  2. Ecomerge Says:

    For more information on Bluefin Tuna conservation come check out our blog!
    http://www.ecomerge.blogspot.com/
    Thank you!

  3. Sean Ecker Says:

    Thanks. It’s a good site. Keep up the good work!

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