Trust Magazine

How Much Do You Know About Illegal Fishing?

Take the quiz to test your knowledge about one of the top threats to the world’s ocean

In this Issue:

  • Fall 2024
  • Creating State Courts That Can Better Serve Communities
  • Return on Investment
  • 28 Million Acres of Alaska Land Remains Off-Limits to Big Development
  • A Major Update for Fiscal 50 Followers
  • A Pledge For All
  • About 3 in 10 Americans Would Consider Buying an EV
  • Auto-IRAs Promote Secure Retirements
  • Why Peatlands Merit Strong Protections
  • How Much Do You Know About Illegal Fishing?
  • How Preventing Antibiotic Overuse Is Helping Fight Superbugs
  • Immigrants Boost Philadelphia's Growth
  • Louisiana Primed to Lead Offshore Wind Supply Chain
  • Pew’s Board Gains New Members
  • Religion’s Importance Varies Around the World
  • The State of the American Middle Class
  • Why Coastal Wetlands Need Protection
  • Why Newfoundland's South Coast Fjords Are Sacred
  • View All Other Issues
How Much Do You Know About Illegal Fishing?
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.
U.S. Coast Guard and Sierra Leone Police officers coordinate on a law enforcement boarding of a fishing vessel in the Atlantic Ocean as part of the African Maritime Law Enforcement Partnership.
U.S. Coast Guard

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.

To mark the occasion this year, The Pew Charitable Trusts is testing your knowledge of IUU fishing and its effect on the global seafood supply chain and the well-being of millions of people around the world.

This piece originally ran on pewtrusts.org on June 3, 2024.
Why Newfoundland's South Coast Fjords Are Sacred
Trust Magazine

A Global Deal to End Harmful Fisheries Subsidies

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Trust Magazine

In the high seas of the South Atlantic Ocean, more than 200 miles off the coast of Argentina, lies one of the world’s largest fisheries. Hundreds of vessels from around the globe amass there to fish for Argentine shortfin squid, which feed along the edge of the Continental Shelf; the catch is sold worldwide, including in many U.S. restaurants as calamari. The vessels use powerful lights to lure squid toward the surface before snagging them with jigging lines—lights so bright and plentiful that they appear clearly on satellite photographs of the Earth at night.

Fishing
Fishing
Data Visualization

Port Activity Study Reveals Illegal Fish to Enter Markets

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Data Visualization

Illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) catch continues to enter world markets, accounting for up to $23.5 billion worth of seafood each year. To combat this illicit activity, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization Agreement on Port State Measures (PSMA) came into force in 2016 after it surpassed 25 ratifications.

Illustration of boats and fish in water
Illustration of boats and fish in water
Trend Magazine

When Too Many Boats Chase Too Few Fish

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Trend Magazine

In the aftermath of World War II, millions of people were starving. With this humanitarian imperative, governments set out to build fishing fleets.