Search results
Showing 161-200 result returned for "IUU"
-
News & Media
Oct 14, 2014EU clears five States following their improvements in fighting illegal fishing, while red-carding Sri LankaRead
-
News & Media
Jul 27, 2014EJF and Republic of Korea sign ground-breaking MOU formalising joint initiative to combat IUU fishingRead
-
News & Media
Jul 23, 2014EU Keeps Pressure on States to Combat IUURead
-
News & Media
Jun 30, 2014Global Oceans Commission Report Offers Path to Sustainable OceansRead
-
News & Media
Jun 11, 2014EJF applauds Spanish financial support for a Global RecordRead
-
News & Media
Jun 10, 2014EU Warns States to Act Against Pirate FishingRead
-
News & Media
Apr 29, 2014Leading Restaurants Show Support for Sustainable SeafoodRead
-
News & Media
Mar 24, 2014EU Council announces first-ever seafood trade ban against illegal fishing nationsRead
-
News & Media
Feb 20, 2014EJF second place in IMCS Network ‘Stop IUU Fishing Award’Read
-
News & Media
Dec 05, 2013EJF welcomes UN decision to combat pirate fishing and Spanish industry call for fishing vessels to obtain IMO numbersRead
-
News & Media
Nov 26, 2013EU Fisheries Commissioner bans three countries from exporting fish to the EU and formally warns KoreaRead
-
News & Media
Nov 19, 2013Landmark EJF Event to Combat Illegal FishingRead
-
News & Media
Nov 07, 2013Korean Government vows to investigate US $14 million consignment of illegal fish during event in BrusselsRead
-
News & Media
Nov 06, 2013Landmark event in Brussels to encourage EU Member States to take stronger action on illegal fishingRead
-
Reports
Sep 23, 2013Bringing Fishing Vessels out of the ShadowsRead
Bringing fishing vessels out of the Shadows draws heavily on EJF’s work towards the eradication of Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) fishing in West Africa, which has revealed a compelling need for an international database of industrial fishing vessels containing their UVI and information on their ownership, flag, history, characteristics and fishing authorisations.
As explained by this briefing, EJF has documented vessels using multiple identities and changing their flags, names and radio call-signs to avoid detection and sanctions. A Global Record, alongside the obligatory use of a unique vessel identifier (UVI) in the form of an IMO number would drive transparency and traceability in global fisheries, thereby facilitating improved fisheries management and further action against IUU fishing.
EJF is calling on the EU to demonstrate strong political leadership to support the establishment of a Global record of fishing vessels, as part of its wider strategy to combat IUU fishing.
-
Films
Aug 13, 2013Under the RadarRead
Under the Radar
UNDER THE RADAR includes video evidence EJF has documented of vessels operating illegally and using multiple identities and changing their flags, names and radio call-signs to avoid detection and sanctions.
Through our work towards the eradication of IUU fishing in West Africa, EJF has gathered evidence that reveals a compelling need for an international database of industrial fishing vessels, which contains their UVI and information on their ownership, flag, history, characteristics and fishing authorisations. This would enable the global fishing fleet to be monitored and regulated more effectively.
-
Films
Aug 11, 2013Through the NetRead
Through the Net
Through the Net charts EJF’s investigations into 'pirate' fishing in West Africa and tracks the journey of fish caught illegally in Sierra Leone to the European seafood market through the Spanish port of Las Palmas.
The film reveals gaps in the EU regulation to prevent, deter and eliminate Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing and highlights steps that need to be taken to ensure that the regulation works effectively. The film features interviews with the EU Fisheries Commissioner, Members of the European Parliament and fishing communities that suffer the impacts of pirate fishing in West Africa.
The voiceover is provided by award-winning journalist and broadcaster Jonathan Dimbleby. Soundtrack by Tom Strang.
-
Reports
Jul 09, 2013Keeping Illegal Fish out of Europe: Ensuring Success for the IUU RegulationRead
This innovative legal tool has placed the EU at the forefront of efforts to address pirate fishing. Whilst it has the potential to leave a positive legacy in the fight against IUU fishing, evidence demonstrates that a lack of coordination and uniformity in its implementation risks compromising its intended objectives.
Diversions of fish consignments to Member State ports with poorer controls than those of their neighbours and a growing trend in containerisation of fish suggest a need for more consistent implementation efforts and increased trade flow scrutiny. The absence of any vessels in the IUU Vessel Community List identified independently by Member States or by the European Commission is also concerning. -
News & Media
May 29, 2013EJF investigation reveals human rights abuses in Thailand's fishing industryRead
-
News & Media
Apr 24, 2013EJF Calls on the EU to Support a Global Record of Fishing VesselsRead
-
News & Media
Apr 15, 2013EJF calls on a ban on transhipment at sea in West AfricaRead
-
News & Media
Feb 20, 2013EJF supports bipartisan efforts in the United States to end pirate fishingRead
-
News & Media
Feb 14, 2013We have turned a corner in the fight against pirate fishingRead
-
Reports
Feb 11, 2013Transhipment at Sea: BriefingRead
Transhipment at Sea: The Need for a Ban in West Africa draws heavily on the evidence EJF has gathered through its work towards the eradication of IUU, or ‘pirate’ fishing in West Africa. It explains how the international movement of fisheries products – both legal and illegal – often depends upon transhipments. The complexities involvement in fisheries regulations mean that transhipments can be problematic and are often linked to illegal fishing activities. EJF’s call on coastal and flag States to ban transhipments at sea in West Africa is part of the wider effort to combat IUU, or ‘pirate’, fishing.
This new briefing discusses the lack of control in authorised transhipments and the fact that illegal transhipment at sea is widely used by IUU fishing vessels to gain access to market. It makes the case for a ban on transhipments of fish at sea in West Africa as well as a ban on the entry of seafood from such transhipments into the European market.
-
News & Media
Jan 18, 2013EJF met with the Spanish Government this week to discuss actions to combat pirate fishingRead
-
News & Media
Jan 16, 2013Gabonese Government suspends fishing to insist on best practices for sustainabilityRead
-
News & Media
Nov 16, 2012EJF responds to the first EU warning to countries involved in pirate fishingRead
-
News & Media
Oct 11, 2012EJF launches new report: Pirate Fishing ExposedRead
-
News & Media
Sep 21, 2012Sierra Leone issues record fineRead
-
Films
Sep 17, 2012Pirate Fishing: What's the Catch?Read
Pirate Fishing: What's the Catch?
This short film explains the impacts of illegal fishing in West Africa and beyond: depletion of fish stocks, destroying marine ecosystems, and jeopardising the livelihoods of local communities.
Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing, otherwise known as pirate fishing, depletes fish stocks, destroys the sensitive marine ecosystems, puts legitimate fishers at an unfair disadvantage and jeopardises the livelihoods of some of the world’s poorest people.
With thanks to the sound studio 4AM Productions.
-
Films
Sep 16, 2012All At SeaRead
All At Sea
An EJF film that exposes the abuse of human rights on illegal fishing vessels.
Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing, or pirate fishing, has been recognised as one of the major threats to the world's fish stocks. However, the focus so far has mostly been on the impacts on marine life and on local fishing communities. While these problems are extremely serious, there's one more that is rarely reported: human rights violations. Escaping regulatory checks on their catches, IUU vessel operators frequently get away with seriously abusing the human rights of their crews.
In this film, we look at the conditions in which people on board vessels that engage in pirate fishing live and work.
All at Sea was screened at the 13th UN Association Film Festival in 2010.
Soundtrack by Tom Strang.
With thanks to the sound studio 4AM Productions.
-
Films
Sep 12, 2012All At Sea (Short Version)Read
All At Sea (Short Version)
Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing, or pirate fishing, has been recognised as one of the major threats to the world's fish stocks. However, the focus so far has mostly been on the impacts on marine life and on local fishing communities. While these problems are extremely serious, there's one more that is rarely reported: human rights violations. Escaping regulatory checks on their catches, IUU vessel operators frequently get away with seriously abusing the human rights of their crews. In this film, we look at the conditions in which people on board vessels that engage in pirate fishing live and work.
All at Sea was screened at the 13th UN Association Film Festival in 2010.
Soundtrack by Tom Strang.
With thanks to the sound studio 4AM Productions.
-
Reports
Aug 23, 2012Briefing: Through the NetRead
Implementation of the EU Regulation to Prevent, Deter and Eliminate IUU Fishing.
-
News & Media
Jul 25, 2012update from ejf's oceans teamRead
-
News & Media
May 14, 2012Come dine with usRead
-
Films
Mar 17, 2012Deadly CatchRead
Deadly Catch
Deadly Catch takes a closer look at the huge impacts illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing, or pirate fishing, is having on communities in Sierra Leone.
-
Films
Feb 29, 2012Plunder of the Oceans - EJF at the Frontline ClubRead
Plunder of the Oceans - EJF at the Frontline Club
(Audio only)
EJF's Ocean Campaigner Andy Hickman speaks at the Frontline Club on the 7th June. Short film screening of Deadly Catch, followed by a discussion with an expert panel and audience Q&A. Chaired by Tom Clarke, science correspondent Channel 4 News. Domitilla Senni, policy adviser to the Pew Environment Group since 2006. John Pearce is a Senior Consultant at MRAG Ltd.
One of the single biggest factors in ocean degradation is overfishing. Fish stocks have declined dramatically, with as much as 90% of big fish gone in some parts of the global ocean. More than one billion people rely on fish as their main source of protein globally. As catches decline and quotas and rules are tightened in response, there has been a huge increase in illegal, unreported or unregulated (IUU) or “pirate” fishing.
Pirate fishing is estimated to make up almost one-fifth of the global catch, and respects neither national boundaries nor international attempts to manage ocean resources. The recent seizure of £4 million worth of seafood in the Spanish port of Las Palmas, allegedly caught illegally in west African waters and headed for dinner tables in Europe, serves to highlight this growing criminal trade, which exploits lax regulations at ports and on the high seas, and often involves serious human rights infringements.
-
Reports
Feb 20, 2012Liberian Fishing Communities: Problems and SolutionsRead
As a first step in community engagement, and to inform the other sets of activities in Liberia, in early 2012 EJF held meetings in 13 communities. These were spread across the country, though seven were focused in Grand Cape Mount County, which is the site of Liberia’s recently inaugurated pilot CMA.
This document sets out findings from each community. It also provides an analytical summary of results across Liberia that will inform a set of working recommendations that will guide EJF’s work with artisanal fishing communities, both in Liberia and elsewhere in West Africa.
-
News & Media
Feb 10, 2012Sierra Leone meeting signals progress towards combating pirate fishingRead
-
News & Media
Jan 25, 2012Illegal fishing clamp-down in Sierra LeoneRead