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World Fisheries

48

Country

Aquaculture

Catch

Total

Aquaculture

Catch

Total

China

24,580,671

16,987,325

41,567,996

26,050,101

16,529,389

42,579,490

Peru

6,801

10,658,620

10,665,421

9,404

7,986,103

7,995,507

India

1,942,204

3,742,296

5,684,500

2,202,630

3,762,600

5,965,230

Japan

762,824

4,971,412

5,734,236

801,948

4,719,152

5,521,100

United States

428,262

4,745,321

5,173,583

460,998

4,944,406

5,405,404

Indonesia

788,500

4,069,691

4,858,191

864,276

4,203,830

5,068,106

Chile

391,587

4,300,160

4,691,747

566,096

3,797,143

4,363,239

Russian Federation

74,124

3,973,535

4,047,659

89,945

3,628,323

3,718,268

Thailand

731,955

2,911,173

3,643,128

724,228

2,881,316

3,605,544

Norway

491,284

2,703,415

3,194,699

512,101

2,687,303

3,199,404

Philippines

393,861

1,893,017

2,286,878

434,657

1,945,217

2,379,874

South Korea

293,420

1,823,175

2,116,595

294,484

1,988,002

2,282,486

Viet Nam

510,555

1,450,590

1,961,145

518,500

1,491,123

2,009,623

Iceland

3,623

1,982,522

1,986,145

4,371

1,980,715

1,985,086

Bangladesh

657,121

1,004,264

1,661,385

687,000

1,000,000

1,687,000

Denmark

43,609

1,534,089

1,577,698

41,573

1,510,439

1,552,012

Mexico

53,918

1,315,581

1,369,499

76,075

1,398,592

1,474,667

Spain

312,171

1,045,488

1,357,659

312,647

1,084,820

1,397,467

Malaysia

151,773

1,289,245

1,441,018

158,158

1,234,733

1,392,891

China - Taipei

243,856

1,093,889

1,337,745

297,428

1,005,199

1,302,627

All others

2,625,064

21,945,012

24,570,076

2,744,736

22,577,629

25,322,365

Total

35,487,183 95,439,820

130,927,003 37,851,356 92,356,034

130,207,390

Note:--For the United Statesthe weight of clams, oysters, scallops, and other mollusks includes the shell weight. This

weight is not included in U.S.landings shown elsewhere. Data for marine mammals and aquatic plants are excluded.

Source:--Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).

- - - - - - - - - -Metric tons- - - - - - - - -

- - - - - - - - - -Metric tons- - - - - - - - -

Live-weight

Live-weight

WORLD AQUACULTURE AND COMMERCIAL CATCHES BY COUNTRY http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:SiUXrD6_IBEJ:www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/st1/fus/current/04_world2002.pdf+world+fisheries+china&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=5&gl=us&client=firefox-a http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/english/200010/31/eng20001031_54032.html

The Chinese government has worked to propel the sustainable growth pattern of its fishery resources and will need to cooperate with the rest of the world, said Liu Chengguo, vice minister of Agriculture.

The four-day congress is sponsored by the China Society of Fisheries, the World Aquaculture Society, Asian Fisheries Society and American Fisheries Society. It takes place once every four years.

http://www.greenfacts.org/en/fisheries/index.htm#3

n response to these changes, many RFBs have reviewed or amended their respective agreements or conventions. However, the 1982 UN Convention, itself, can be considered inadequate as a mechanism for promoting effective fisheries management, in view of three interrelated factors:

  • The Convention does not confer management authority on RFBs.
  • The Convention ushered in an era of newly declared sovereign rights over extended areas of ocean space, which became a paramount consideration for many coastal states.
  • The general state of the world fisheries resources at the time did not appear to be particularly worrisome. As a result, many RFBs remained virtually inactive with respect to effective fisheries management.

http://www.greenfacts.org/en/fisheries/l-3/07-regulation.htm#1p1 Regrettably, assessments show that strengthened governance of RFBs does not always translate into more effective fisheries management. One of the main constraints faced by RFBs is a lack of willingness on the part of member countries to delegate sufficient decision-making power and responsibilities to RFBs, combined, in some cases, with an inability or reluctance to implement decisions taken by them.

http://www.greenfacts.org/en/fisheries/l-3/07-regulation.htm#1p1 Market forces are exerting a strong influence on aquaculture development, particularly that of commercial and industrial aquaculture. Middle-class consumers in many developed and developing countries are becoming increasingly influential and concerned about what they eat and at what cost food is produced, especially in the case of internationally traded products. Major importing regions and countries have begun to set stringent standards and regulations to ensure quality and safety and to reduce the social and environmental impacts of production. Aspects covered by these standards include trade in endangered species, labelling for origin, traceability, the chain of custody and zero tolerance for certain veterinary drug residues. In 2002, fish and fishery products represented the largest category (over 25 percent) of food safety and quality alerts in the EU. http://www.greenfacts.org/en/fisheries/l-3/07-regulation.htm#1p1 The big winner in the animal protein sweepstakes has been aquaculture, largely because fish are highly efficient at converting feed into protein. Aquacultural output expanded from 13 million tons in 1990 to 38 million tons in 2002, growing by more than 10 percent a year. Chinais the leading producer, accounting for two thirds of the global output in 2000. Its output, rather evenly divided between coastal and inland areas, is dominated by finfish (mostly carp), which are produced inland in freshwater ponds, lakes, reservoirs, and rice paddies, and by shellfish (mostly oysters, clams, and mussels), which are produced in coastal regions.23

Over time, Chinahas evolved a remarkably efficient fish polyculture using four types of carp that feed at different levels of the food chain, in effect emulating natural aquatic ecosystems. Silver carp and bighead carp are filter feeders, eating phytoplankton and zooplankton respectively. The grass carp, as its name implies, feeds largely on vegetation, while the common carp is a bottom feeder, living on detritus on the bottom. China's aquaculture is often integrated with agriculture, enabling farmers to use agricultural wastes, such as pig or duck manure, to fertilize ponds, thus stimulating the growth of plankton. Fish polyculture, which typically boosts pond productivity over that of monocultures by at least half, also dominates fish farming in India.24

As land and water become ever more scarce, China's fish farmers are feeding more grain concentrates in order to raise pond productivity. Using this technique, China's farmers raised the annual pond yield per hectare from 2.4 tons of fish in 1990 to 4.1 tons in 1996.25

ublic attention has focused on aquacultural operations that are environmentally disruptive, such as the farming of salmon, a carnivorous species, and shrimp. Yet these operations account for only 1.5 million tons of output. World aquaculture is dominated by shellfish and by herbivorous species---mainly carp in Chinaand India, but also catfish in the United Statesand tilapia in several countries. This is where the potential for growth lies.27 http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:h5bEX3MtzxQJ:www.earth-policy.org/Books/PB/PBch8_ss4.htm+world+fisheries+china&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=9&gl=us&client=firefox-a

The post-UNCLOS technological and geographical expansion extended the trend of catch increase, if at a slower rate. Global catches began to decline in the late 1980s, a trend reversal due to broad-based collapse of the underlying ecosystems, long masked by systematic over-reporting by China (Watson & Pauly 2001; figure 1), and the targeting of deep water stocks (see figure 3). Several major studies, by Jacksonet al. (2001), Christensenet al. (2003), and Myers & Worm (2003), showed that marine fisheries impact their resources base and their supporting ecosystems far more strongly than commonly assumed, thus providing further support for our explanation of observed catch trends. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1636108 The result is that more and more restrictions are being imposed on fisheries with little or no input from those fisheries themselves.  I am here today to tell you with no hesitation, that virtually every problem facing the world's fisheries can be solved, including the threat posed by radical NGOs.  But, that will not happen unless the industry itself decides that it must change how it operates.   http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:QVnfSgNq_i0J:www.iwmc.org/fish/010101.rtf+world+fisheries+china&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=24&gl=us&client=firefox-a China remains by far the largest producer, with reported fisheriesproduction

of 44.3 million tonnes in 2002 (16.6 and 27.7 million tonnes from capture fisheries

and aquaculture, respectively), providing an estimated domestic food supply of

27.7 kg per capita as well as production for export and non-food purposes. However,

there are continued indications that capture fisheriesand aquaculture production

statistics for Chinamay be too high, as indicated i n The State of WorldFisheriesand

 1

and that this problem has existed since the early 1990s. Because of

the importance of China and the uncertainty about its production statistics, China, as

in previous issues of this report, is generally discussed separately from the rest of the

world.   http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:irOzEDc-YZUJ:ftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/007/y5600e/y5600e01.pdf+world+fisheries+china&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=26&gl=us&client=firefox-a

STANDING UP TO CHINA The findings came as little surprise to Lee Alverson, a global fisheries consultant in Seattle who headed research for the National Marine Fisheries Service in the Northwest and Alaska from 1970 to 1980. "It takes a lot of nerve to make the sort of accusation they did about China, but there were a lot of scientists who felt nervous about those numbers," Alverson said. "If any of the nations are putting bogus numbers into the accounting process, then our ability to assess if overfishing is going on is in jeopardy." Pauly said the world community must end overfishing if it is to meet future food demands. The new studies, he said, are "dashing hopes that the sea can continue to meet our growing demand for fish."   http://www.oceanicfisheries.net/