Panorama
 
 
 
 
 

TIME’S RUNNING OUT FOR TUNA


Environmental Panorama
International
April of 2008


20 April 2008 - Tuna stocks in the Pacific are running out due to overfishing from illegal and commercial fishing fleets.

About 60 percent of the world’s tuna stocks come from the Pacific, and scientists believe that two key species – bigeye and yellowfin – are in danger of becoming overfished.

To help stop this Greenpeace is touring the Western Pacific Ocean in the ship, Esperanza, to gather evidence of illegal and excessive tuna fishing practices.

On Sunday, Greenpeace took action against the US purse seiner, Cape Finisterre, in a pocket of international waters between Pacific Island countries known as the Pacific Commons. Activists painted the side of the vessel with the words “Tuna overkill” and held a banner reading ‘Marine reserves NOW’. The fishing vessel was asked to leave the area immediately.

A few days ago, Greenpeace confiscated a Fish Aggregation Device (FAD) we found in the Pacific Ocean. Fishing fleets use FADs to lure schools of tuna to a specific spot so they can be quickly caught in huge nets. However, juvenile bigeye and yellowfin tuna as well as other fish are killed as bycatch when caught in the nets.

We also deployed a banner reading ‘Marine Reserves Now’ near the bow of a Korean purse seine vessel called Olympus, while we asked it to leave the area. The ship is owned by Korea’s largest tuna company, Dongwon Industries Co. Ltd, which is suspected of being involved in illegal fishing in 2006.

Watch video of the action at our Australian site

Update, 21 April 2008 Greenpeace activists boarded a Taiwanese longliner, the Nian Sheng 3, to inspect the contents of the hold. As well as tuna, the activists discovered a dozen sacks with hundreds of frozen shark fins and tails. Shark finning is one of the practices that would be banned in a marine reserve. It's shockingly wasteful: only the fin is removed for the Asian shark-fin soup market, with the entire shark returned to the ocean, sometimes as a carcass, sometimes alive. We escorted the vessel out of international waters, but this practice will not stop in the Pacific Commons until these waters become Marine Reserves -- you can help by signing our petition.

Shark fins found aboard the Nian Sheng 3

Greenpeace Pacific campaigner onboard the Esperanza Lagi Toribau said that advances in technology meant large ships (floating factories from countries as far away as the US and Europe) could catch as much fish in two days as the fishers of some small Pacific Island countries catch in a year.

"As tuna catches in other oceans have declined because of overfishing, the floating factory ships are looking to move into the Pacific, making it harder for local fishing fleets to catch tuna which is a vital food source for the region," Toribau said.

Greenpeace’s solutions

Greenpeace is calling on the Australian Government to support the Pacific Island nations to make fishing in the region sustainable by turning some of the Pacific’s international waters into no-take marine reserves. This will allow tuna stocks and all other marine life to recover from overexploitation.

Greenpeace is also calling for a 50 percent cut to the fishing effort in the Pacific to ensure there is tuna left to catch in the future.

Greenpeace advocates the creation of a network of marine reserves, protecting 40 per cent of the world's oceans, as the long-term solution to overfishing and the recovery of our overexploited oceans.

What you can do

You can help ensure the survival of the Pacific’s tuna stocks by demanding that retailers and chefs stop stocking unsustainable tuna products such as bluefin, bigeye and yellowfin, which are now threatened in all oceans. You can also sign our petition demanding that 40 percent of the world's oceans be set aside as no-take marine reserves.

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Unilever's 'Monkey Business' - Greenpeace swings into action

21 April 2008 - International — It's been a busy morning for Greenpeace activists across Europe, many of whom have been dressing up as orang-utans to draw attention to Unilever's "monkey business". Today, we're launching the next stage in our campaign to protect the rainforests of Indonesia from the expansion of the palm oil industry.

Our research shows that Unilever, maker of Dove and many other well-known brands, is buying palm oil from companies that are destroying valuable rainforest and peatland areas; bad news not only for the millions of people who depend on these for their way of life and endangered species such as the orang-utan, but also for the global climate.

In the United Kingdom, at the Unilever factory at Port Sunlight, near Liverpool, sixty Greenpeace activists occupied the production lines, while in London employees at Unilever's HQ were greeted on their way to work by screeching mating calls and orang-utans clambering all over the building. At Unilever's Rotterdam HQ, in the Netherlands, six activists scaled the waterfront building and hung a banner reading, "Unilever, Don't Destroy the Forests". In Rome, another ten orang-utans stopped Unilever employees entering their Italian HQ. Jumping out of a huge box marked, "Stop Dove from Destroying Rainforests," the orang-utans handed out flyers outlining the palm oil situation and demanding a moratium.

Why Unilever? For a start, Unilever is one of the largest users of palm oil in the world, funnelling up to 1 in every 20 litres produced from Indonesia into some of its many products. This means Unilever has a huge influence on the way palm oil is made.

Further, as chair of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), Unilever has even more clout. The RSPO is a group of retailers, manufacturers and suppliers whose aim is to create standards for the production of sustainable palm oil. As things stand, however, it's little more than a greenwashing operation, as card-carrying members of the RSPO continue to be involved in the destruction of Indonesia's rainforests.

Following its creation in 2002, the RSPO set up a certification scheme, but six years later not a drop of certified oil is yet available. Even when certified palm oil does become available later this year, there's nothing to prevent it being blended with non-certified palm oil. This will make it impossible for RSPO members to guarantee that their palm oil does not come from recently deforested areas. All this was documented in our 'Cooking the Climate' report, produced last November, in which Unilever featured prominently. Since then, we've collected fresh evidence of Unilever's role in deforestation.

Today's actions coincide with the release of our new report, 'How Unilever's suppliers are Burning Up Borneo'. The report details how some of Unilever's key palm oil suppliers - Sinar Mas, Wilmar, Sime Darby and IOI among them - are devastating forest and peatland areas in Central Kalimantan. Not only are millions of people who live in or rely on the forests for their survival being put at risk, but as these areas are destroyed many endangered species are at even greater risk of extinction, including Sumatran tigers, Javan rhinoceroses and orang-utans.

There are also devastating consequences for the climate. As the forests and tropical peatlands of Indonesia are destroyed and converted into oil palm plantations, huge volumes of greenhouse gases are released, accelerating climate change. Indonesia is the third largest emitter of these gases in the world, in large part due to the destruction of its forests at the hands of the palm oil industry.

This is not great going for a company that paints itself green and responsible: take a look at Unilever's website, where it makes a big deal of its efforts to be both environmentally and socially responsible. As our report shows, when it comes to palm oil the reality is very different!

We want Unilever to clean up its act, not just with the palm oil it uses in Dove but in all its products. To start the ball rolling, we've devised a three-point action plan for Unilever:

support an immediate moratorium on the destruction of rainforest and peatland areas in Indonesia to grow palm oil;
stop trading with palm oil suppliers who are involved in this destruction; and
pressure the RSPO to also support a moratorium.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International
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