Reuters / Dylan Martinez
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A shocking new video campaign
produced by environmentalist group Greenpeace claims to show cruel and
"unnecessary" methods used to catch tuna, killing thousands of
sharks, dolphins and rare sea creatures in the process.
The group claim that two of the UK’s
biggest distributors of tuna, John West and Princes, still use the method to
catch their fish, despite other major supermarkets opting for alternative
methods.
The video, published on Tuesday,
shows fisheries in the UK, Italy and Australia using fish aggregating devices
(FADs) to catch tuna in the Indian Ocean – large mechanical nets designed to
catch thousands of tuna fish at a time.
However, the video purports to show
how other sea creatures - included endangered species – often get caught up in
the nets and in many cases die as a result. The video also shows fishermen
dumping the dead animals back into the ocean.
“The fish
aggregating devices are designed to attract tuna but they also attract all
sorts of other marine life,” Greenpeace
oceans campaigner Nathaniel Pelle told the Daily Mail.
“When you use
those two methods in combination you end up catching large amounts of incidental
species you don't mean to catch.”
According to Greenpeace, less than a
quarter of Princes’ tuna is free from FADs, despite a promise to go 100 percent
FAD-free by the end of 2014, while John West have allegedly backtracked on
their promise to cease using the method.
“Send a message
now to Princes and John West to tell them to stop killing sharks, turtles and
rays. We won’t accept broken promises. They must keep their word and protect
our oceans,” the Greenpeace campaign says.
In documents seen by the Guardian,
John West allegedly expressed concerns about the “availability” of
FAD-free stocks of tuna, adding that they could not stop other animals being
taken into the net.
“We are a
responsible business whose core principles focus on a holistic approach to
fishing sustainably,” a spokesperson
from John West said.
“We must
recognize that fishing gear and fishing methodologies are important, but only
part of the solution to ensuring the sustainability of stocks.”
The spokesperson also said the firm
was developing methods to “implement sustainable business solutions” in
the future.
It is estimated around two-thirds of
all seine tuna, including the yellowfin and bigeye variations, are caught using
FADs, despite warnings from international bodies including the European Union,
who have warned that the method reduces the biological reproduction of tuna.
Campaigners urge fishermen to use the "pole
and line" method to catch fish, used in countries such as Senegal and
Indonesia.
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