Oz
06-13-2009, 09:17 PM
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/revealed-the-bid-to-corner-worlds-bluefin-tuna-market-1695479.html
seen this on another board and thought i would spread it here
Revealed: the bid to corner world's bluefin tuna market
Mitsubishi freezing fish to sell later as stock numbers plummet toward extinction
By Martin Hickman, Consumer Affairs Correspondent
Bluefin tuna is being over-fished and its numbers can't be sustained, scientists say
Japan's sprawling Mitsubishi conglomerate has cornered a 40 per cent share of the world
market in bluefin tuna, one of the world's most endangered fish.
A corporation within the £170bn Mitsubishi empire is importing thousands of tonnes of the
fish from Europe into Tokyo's premium fish markets, despite stocks plummeting towards
extinction in the Mediterranean.
Bluefin tuna frozen at -60C now could be sold in several years' time for astronomical sums
if Atlantic bluefin becomes commercially extinct as forecast, a result of the near free-for-all
enjoyed by the tuna fleet.
In the forthcoming documentary film The End of the Line, Roberto Mielgo, a former bluefin
fisherman who travels the world monitoring catches, claims that Mitsubishi buys and sells
60 per cent of the threatened fish and that it has expanded its freezer capacity to hold
extra bluefin.
Mitsubishi acknowledges that it freezes bluefin, but only, it says, to even out peaks
and troughs in supply.
"Mitsubishi Corporation handles between 35 per cent and 40 per cent of Atlantic and
Mediterranean bluefin tuna imported to Japan," the company told The Independent.
"As we explicitly explained to the makers of the film, the fishing season for bluefin
tuna in the Mediterranean is very short, making it necessary to freeze tuna to provide
customers with stable supplies throughout the year."
Fish stocks across the world are in retreat because of over-fishing. One study suggests
oceans will be stripped clean of all fish by 2048. Bluefin is imminently at risk of commercial
extinction. The wildlife charity WWF forecasts that breeding stocks of the fish that
migrate from the Atlantic to spawn will be wiped out in the Mediterranean by 2012.
Although the legal bluefin catch is set at 22,000 tonnes, conservationists suspect
the actual catch is 60,000 tonnes, four times the maximum that marine scientists
recommend. After studying catches and sales, Charles Clover, the environmental
journalist behind the film The End of the Line, believes that businesses involved in
the ransacking are deep-freezing 20,000 tonnes of bluefin a year for later use.
He hopes his film will galvanise the public about over-fishing in the same way Al
Gore's An Inconvenient Truth mobilised opinion against climate change.
British retailers and chefs will not stock bluefin because it is so endangered. However,
as disclosed in The Independent last week, the Japanese restaurant Nobu continues
to serve it – while advising diners to choose a dish that is less environmentally damaging.
The fisheries body responsible for numbers, the International Commission for the
Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), sanctioned a bluefin catch of 22,000 tonnes
this year in defiance of its own scientists who advised no more than 8,500-15,000 tonnes.
WWF said the decision was a "disgrace". In fisheries circles, ICCAT is sometimes
referred to as the International Conspiracy to Catch All Tuna. Rules forbidding the
use of spotter planes to identify tuna shoals are flouted and boats are thought to
have connections to organised crime in Italy.
Willie Mackenzie, a Greenpeace fish campaigner, said: "Mitsubishi are best known
in the UK for making cars or electrical goods – and for most people it comes as a
bit of a shock to find out they are one of the world's biggest traders in the endangered
bluefin tuna. Bluefin tuna are as endangered as rhinos or tigers."
seen this on another board and thought i would spread it here
Revealed: the bid to corner world's bluefin tuna market
Mitsubishi freezing fish to sell later as stock numbers plummet toward extinction
By Martin Hickman, Consumer Affairs Correspondent
Bluefin tuna is being over-fished and its numbers can't be sustained, scientists say
Japan's sprawling Mitsubishi conglomerate has cornered a 40 per cent share of the world
market in bluefin tuna, one of the world's most endangered fish.
A corporation within the £170bn Mitsubishi empire is importing thousands of tonnes of the
fish from Europe into Tokyo's premium fish markets, despite stocks plummeting towards
extinction in the Mediterranean.
Bluefin tuna frozen at -60C now could be sold in several years' time for astronomical sums
if Atlantic bluefin becomes commercially extinct as forecast, a result of the near free-for-all
enjoyed by the tuna fleet.
In the forthcoming documentary film The End of the Line, Roberto Mielgo, a former bluefin
fisherman who travels the world monitoring catches, claims that Mitsubishi buys and sells
60 per cent of the threatened fish and that it has expanded its freezer capacity to hold
extra bluefin.
Mitsubishi acknowledges that it freezes bluefin, but only, it says, to even out peaks
and troughs in supply.
"Mitsubishi Corporation handles between 35 per cent and 40 per cent of Atlantic and
Mediterranean bluefin tuna imported to Japan," the company told The Independent.
"As we explicitly explained to the makers of the film, the fishing season for bluefin
tuna in the Mediterranean is very short, making it necessary to freeze tuna to provide
customers with stable supplies throughout the year."
Fish stocks across the world are in retreat because of over-fishing. One study suggests
oceans will be stripped clean of all fish by 2048. Bluefin is imminently at risk of commercial
extinction. The wildlife charity WWF forecasts that breeding stocks of the fish that
migrate from the Atlantic to spawn will be wiped out in the Mediterranean by 2012.
Although the legal bluefin catch is set at 22,000 tonnes, conservationists suspect
the actual catch is 60,000 tonnes, four times the maximum that marine scientists
recommend. After studying catches and sales, Charles Clover, the environmental
journalist behind the film The End of the Line, believes that businesses involved in
the ransacking are deep-freezing 20,000 tonnes of bluefin a year for later use.
He hopes his film will galvanise the public about over-fishing in the same way Al
Gore's An Inconvenient Truth mobilised opinion against climate change.
British retailers and chefs will not stock bluefin because it is so endangered. However,
as disclosed in The Independent last week, the Japanese restaurant Nobu continues
to serve it – while advising diners to choose a dish that is less environmentally damaging.
The fisheries body responsible for numbers, the International Commission for the
Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), sanctioned a bluefin catch of 22,000 tonnes
this year in defiance of its own scientists who advised no more than 8,500-15,000 tonnes.
WWF said the decision was a "disgrace". In fisheries circles, ICCAT is sometimes
referred to as the International Conspiracy to Catch All Tuna. Rules forbidding the
use of spotter planes to identify tuna shoals are flouted and boats are thought to
have connections to organised crime in Italy.
Willie Mackenzie, a Greenpeace fish campaigner, said: "Mitsubishi are best known
in the UK for making cars or electrical goods – and for most people it comes as a
bit of a shock to find out they are one of the world's biggest traders in the endangered
bluefin tuna. Bluefin tuna are as endangered as rhinos or tigers."