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Japan and China Help Defeat Shark Conservation Proposal at UN Meeting
Japan and China Help Defeat Shark Conservation Proposal at UN Meeting
China, Japan, Russia and a handful of other countries are at the heart of a defeat of a proposal that would have benefited sharks by requiring increased transparency in the shark trade.
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Finning - the practice of cutting off just the fins of sharks and throwing the rest of the shark, often still alive, back overboard for a slow death and wasteful treatment of a food source - is responsible for killing somewhere between 40 million and 100 million sharks per year (the latest estimate from Oceana is 73 million per year). No one really knows because the practice isn't well tracked, and is often done illegally.
So while the species collapses, the members of the UN meeting on shark conservation debate and ultimately make zero progress to protect one of the most important animals in our oceans. The defeat of this measure - far less controversial and easier to enforce than others on the table at the week-long meeting - is a bad sign for our oceans, and us.
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Sharks lose out at UN meeting
Sharks lose out at UN meeting
An effort to bolster conservation measures for plummeting shark populations was defeated yesterday at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), according to the AP.
The nonbinding measure would have increased transparency in the shark trade and produced research on illegal fishing for sharks.
The measure was taken down largely by China, Japan and Russia who argued that shark populations weren't in trouble, despite a decline in some shark populations of 90 percent. Currently the IUCN Red List estimates that 32 percent of open ocean sharks are threatened with extinction. As the ocean's top predators, research has shown that a decline in sharks sparks a trophic cascade whereby many other species all down the food chain are impacted.
Shark populations have suffered in part due to the shark fin trade for the growing consumption of shark fin soup, a delicacy in parts of Asia, especially China. Sharks are caught, de-finned (their fins cut off), and then thrown back into the ocean to die. It has been estimated that 26 to 73 million sharks are killed annually for their fins. Sharks are also often caught as bycatch.
China, Japan, and Russia further argued that the measure would hurt poor countries. Libya and Morocco concurred arguing that the measure would hurt poor fishermen.
The AP says that the decline of this measure—which was expected to pass easily—may be a bad sign for the meeting's other proposals to aid endangered species such as elephants and bluefin tuna.
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I use a green machine
Those people in power only looking for money makes me sick. I wish they would get the big picture. What a waste of a life........for a fin??!!?!?!
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