Declining Fish Stocks

Aug 17, 2012

Three-quarters of the world's fish stocks are in distress and many fisheries could collapse by midcentury. Should we ban industrial fishing or regulate it for sustainable output? Can farmed fish make up the difference? Furthermore, who will police the oceans? What do you think?

This Global Ethics Corner is part of the Council's second annual SEPTEMBER SUSTAINABILITY MONTH, which kicks off a year of events and resources on sustainability. Generous funding of the Carnegie Council's 2010-2011 sustainability programming has been provided by Hewlett-Packard and by Booz & Company.

Three-quarters of the world's fish stocks are in distress and many fisheries could collapse by midcentury, reports the UN.

In our manufactured world, wild species perhaps deserve special protection, first and foremost as a potentially sustainable resource.

We're a hungry world, nearing 7 billion today and peaking around 9 billion in a few decades. Access to quality protein is an ethical and developmental issue. Fish account for 20 to 30 percent of the total animal protein consumed in many poorer Sub-Saharan and Southeast Asian countries.

Additionally, all nations are not equal maritime powers. Some can't enforce commercial laws in their territorial waters. While industrial fishing is economically cost effective, industrial boats scour coastal waters leaving little behind for the local people who depend on the seas.

But, fish stocks are the real losers. Undesirables, noncommercial species, and juveniles are unintentionally caught and dumped back dead. This bycatch is especially bad in the shrimp industry, where it routinely accounts for 80 percent of the haul.

Can we reconfigure the fishing industry for greater food security and ecological sustainability? Will doing so meet the growing demand for protein?

Conservation zones present a reliable solution, as does banning the trade in threatened species. Aquaculture is on the rise and also has promise. Yet, it introduces problems of breeding, disease, and pollution, and requires fishmeal to fatten the farmed fish.

Should we ban industrial fishing or regulate it for sustainable output? Can farmed fish make up the difference? Furthermore, who will police the oceans? What do you think?

By Evan O'Neil and William Vocke

For more information see:

Conference on saving world's fish stocks opens at UN Headquarters
UN News Centre, May 24, 2010.

Photo Credits in order of Appearance

See Wah Cheng
John Bostock
Lamoix
Javier D.
Elemento Humano
B K
Jason Tabarias
Michele Molinari
Doug DuCap
Tory
Sonya
Alpha
Quinn Dombrowski
eutrophication&hypox ia
Norsk Havbrukssenter

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