Other Media | La Voz de Galicia: Violations detected in one in ten European Fisheries Control Agency inspections
SPAIN
Thursday, May 01, 2025
Surveillance once again focuses on the Mediterranean Sea
Based in Vigo, the European Fisheries Control Agency (EFCA) has just released an activity report revealing that in 2024 it detected suspected violations in one in ten inspections at sea or on land. Coordinating and cooperating with EU members and other countries, it closed the year with 45,734, almost 2% more than in 2023. It identified "at least one" suspected violation of the rules in 4,823, 14% more than the previous year.
Source: La Voz de Galicia l Read the full article here
GUANGZHOU, (Xinhua) -- At noon on Thursday, South China Sea waters north of the 12th parallel north entered a three-and-a-half-month annual fishing moratorium, according to China Coast Guard.
The South China Sea branch of China Coast Guard, in conjunction with marine fishery law enforcement departments and public security authorities in Guangdong, Guangxi and Hainan, has launched a special law enforcement operation for the 2025 South China Sea fishing moratorium to ensure its effective implementation.
Before the moratorium began, task forces boarded fishing boats and patrolled docks to make known relevant laws and regulations to local fishermen, ensuring that all boats were returned to port, all crew members came ashore and all fishing nets were stored. Law enforcement vessels have also been dispatched to patrol the jurisdictional waters to establish a strict presence from the start of the moratorium. Enditem
Vietnam's shrimp industry expects to produce between 1.3 and 1.4 million tons in 2025, which would represent a turnover of around $4.3 billion in exports. According to the Vietnam Association of Fishery Product Producers (Vasep), exports exceeded $605 million in the first two months of this year, representing a 46% year-on-year increase.
Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Environment Phung Duc Tien highlights the role of this species in generating foreign currency, as it has represented between 13 and 14% of the value of global exports in the last two decades.
Source: iPac.acuicultura l Read the full article here
China launches world’s first salmon farming vessel. Its mission? to boldly farm where no salmon has been farmed before.
The world’s first industrial salmon farming vessel, Su Hai No. 1, departed from the Huangpu Wenchong Shipyard in Guangzhou on Tuesday for its maiden sea trial, heading 60 nautical miles into the South China Sea.
The 249.8-metre vessel—designed by the Fisheries Machinery and Instrument Research Institute under the Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences—was built at a cost of nearly RMB 600 million ($82.4 million).
Author: Matthew Wilcox / SalmonBusiness l Read the full article here
Scotland fish farmer Loch Duart has launched its own smoked salmon products, Signature Smoke and Double Smoked.
Loch Duart says the Signature Smoke is traditionally cured and smoked over oak shavings providing a subtle smokiness that pairs perfectly with the rich, savoury taste of the salmon for a more delicate flavour.
It adds that the Double Smoked salmon is smoked over oak and then whisky cask shavings, creating a robust, full-bodied smoky flavour.
Source: fishfarmingexpert l Read the full article here
The U.S. shipping and logistics industry is beginning to feel the effect of the Trump administration’s tariffs on Chinese imports, and experts are warning U.S. consumers that they will soon start to see changes themselves.
Investors Observer, a investment trade publication, analyzed the U.S. states that are most and least reliant on Chinese imports in order predict the economic fallout of tariffs.
Unsurprisingly, the publication said that the nation’s two busiest ports, the Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long Beach, both in California, were likely to suffer from a drop in Chinese imports, since 25 percent of the state’s total imports – equivalent to 12 percent of the state’s GDP – come from China.
Author: Erin Spampinato / SeafoodSource l Read the full article here
At Our Ocean Conference in Busan, in the Republic of Korea, the European Union announced €301,485,000 in EU funding to support actions in the fields of the sustainable blue economy, marine pollution, marine protected areas, digital oceans, sustainable fisheries, and ocean and climate change.
This year's conference, celebrating its 10th anniversary, will showcase the accomplishments, and best practices stemming from the voluntary commitments made by the global ocean community over the past decade. Under the umbrella of 'Digital Oceans', the conference will convene to explore the intersection of technology and ocean conservation, with a focus on the above six critical areas.
EU commitments for a safe, secure, clean, healthy and sustainably managed ocean
The European Union is committed to the following actions:
Reston, VA – We are pleased to see Senator Sullivan and his colleagues making progress on a responsible effort to address Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing.
We strongly support the FISH Act legislation that works to actively address IUU concerns unlike the current Seafood Import Monitoring Program (SIMP) that NOAA itself has concluded, “does not prevent or stop IUU fish and fish products from entering U.S. commerce.”
According to the industry monitoring system of the Federal Agency for Fisheries (Federal Service for Fisheries and Oceanography, FSMS), the total Russian catch of aquatic bioresources since the beginning of 2025 has reached 1.775 million tons.
The following provides a basin-by-basin breakdown:
Far Eastern Basin: 1,440.7 thousand tons
Pollock: 1,060.6 thousand tons
Cod: 48.7 thousand tons
Pacific Herring: 239.4 thousand tons
Northern Basin: 114.2 thousand tons
Cod: 72.4 thousand tons
Haddock: 20.5 thousand tons (+0.6 thousand tons compared to the same period in 2024)
Western Basin: 34.4 thousand tons
Sprat (Kilka): 23.2 thousand tons (+0.6 thousand tons compared to the same period in 2024)
Baltic Herring (Sprat): 10.1 thousand tons
Azov-Black Sea Basin: 15.4 thousand tons (+32.1% compared to the same period in 2024)
Anchovy: 12.6 thousand tons (+3.4 thousand tons compared to the same period in 2024)
Volga-Caspian Basin: 29.5 thousand tons (+0.9% compared to the same period in 2024)
Sprat: 21.3 thousand tons (+1.4 thousand tons compared to the same period in 2024)
Other Common Fish Species: 4.1 thousand tons
In the exclusive economic zones of foreign states, conventional fishing areas, and the open part of the World Ocean, the Russian fleet harvested 134.3 thousand tons (+30.1 thousand tons or 28.9% compared to the corresponding period in 2024).
A Decade of Ocean Action: 10th Our Ocean Conference Opens in Busan South Korea
Global leaders convene to celebrate achievements, assess commitments, and forge future strategies for ocean sustainability and climate leadership.
Busan – Today marks the opening of the ...