Dishes of destruction - the
hidden cost of seafood
Gland, Switzerland – Some of Europe’s most
popular fish dishes are a recipe for disaster for our
oceans and fishing communities, warns WWF. The new report
from the global conservation organization exposes the
destructive, illegal and wasteful fishing which lies behind
some of our favourite seafood.
The briefing, Fish Dish – exposing the unacceptable
face of seafood, is the first such review of six favoured
fish dishes in Europe and serves up an urgent warning
to governments to toughen up fisheries management.
In the case of plaice and sole, appreciated for their
delicately flavoured white flesh, most catches come from
Europe’s most wasteful fishery. Up to 80 per cent
of some plaice catches in the North Sea are thrown overboard
dead or dying - either too small or less valuable than
the rest of the catch.
Swordfish steak, popular for barbequing and baking, comes
with a heavy toll of other marine life. For example, the
illegal Moroccan driftnet fishery, targeting swordfish
for the European market, catches one swordfish for every
two sharks, killing an estimated 100,000 sharks per year.
“Not everything caught in a net makes it to the
dinner table.” said Justin Woolford, Manager of
WWF’s European Fisheries Campaign. “The trail
of destruction behind industrialised fishing must be stopped
or our children will be left with a barren ocean.”
Much loved cod ‘n’ chips is the dish with
the most over-fished ingredient - global cod catches have
dropped 70 per cent over the last 30 years. If stocks
continue to decline at the current rate, there will be
no more Atlantic cod on the menu in less than 15 years.
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