Project

International Fisheries

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International Fisheries

Pew works to protect global marine biodiversity and provide food and livelihoods for the world’s fast-growing population by addressing one of the main threats to ocean health—inadequate management and control of large-scale fishing.

Overfishing and illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing put the ocean and marine life at risk, straining the health of ecosystems and people’s food and economic security. Overfishing harms efforts to sustainably manage global fisheries and ensure that ecosystems are healthy and resilient. IUU fishing costs countries billions of dollars each year and circumvents both their laws and the measures that regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs)—intergovernmental bodies that oversee fisheries that cross national boundaries—put in place to manage the world’s fish stocks. At least 1 in 5 fish caught in the global ocean is a product of IUU fishing.

But the tide is turning. Pew works with governments, RFMOs and other multinational bodies, scientific experts, nongovernmental organizations, and the fishing industry to address these threats and secure meaningful improvements to the management and control of large-scale fishing activities. Pew and its partners advance targeted strategies that encourage countries to deliver on their commitments to protect marine biodiversity, help fish populations adapt to climate change, effectively oversee and manage their fishing fleets, and use precautionary, science-based management to ensure sustainable fisheries for the future.

Issue Brief

Transshipment Plays a Major Role in the Global Tuna Industry

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Issue Brief

Commercial tuna fisheries are among the most valuable fisheries on Earth, and with sales valued at more than US$40 billion a year, they play a vital role in coastal economies.

An officer in an orange vest and military hat climbs down from a fishing vessel onto a dinghy. Two other officers are on the smaller boat. One reaches to help the first officer get onto the boat, and the other sits at the wheel.
An officer in an orange vest and military hat climbs down from a fishing vessel onto a dinghy. Two other officers are on the smaller boat. One reaches to help the first officer get onto the boat, and the other sits at the wheel.
Quiz

How Much Do You Know About Illegal Fishing?

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Quiz

Illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing significantly harms not only fish populations and ocean health but also the people who rely on healthy fisheries for food and livelihoods. To draw attention to these threats, the United Nations in 2017 declared June 5 International Day for the Fight Against IUU Fishing.

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