Cover of the hooked on sharks report showing a dead shark being pulled out of the ocean up the side of a ship.
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  • Press Release

EU fleets fishing shark nursery grounds in North Atlantic, Greenpeace report reveals

The report, Hooked on Sharks [1], also reveals that on an average fishing day in the North Atlantic, over 1,200kms of fishing line, with an estimated 15,000-28,000 hooks, is in the water.

Greenpeace has released a short animated film titled The Lonely Shark, featuring a soundtrack by Radiohead’s Thom Yorke. 

Will McCallum [2] of Greenpeace’s Protect the Oceans campaign said: “While the EU and its members claim to be champions of ocean protection, their fishing fleets are deliberately fishing in baby shark breeding grounds in the North Atlantic using longlines with thousands of hooks, a hugely destructive fishing technique. Fishing nations like Spain and Portugal are actively working to undermine marine protection measures for the area. It’s shocking hypocrisy, which is causing environmental harm on a vast scale.”

The report also reveals that the governments involved, Spain and Portugal, have consistently resisted attempts to improve the management of this fishery. 

The North Atlantic’s longline fishery nominally targets swordfish, but has transitioned to rely on shark bycatch to remain profitable. Regulations have failed to keep pace putting sharks, a keystone species, at severe risk. Deliberately ignoring recommendations by scientists and civil society has led to North Atlantic shortfin mako sharks becoming endangered. Global shark populations have plummeted by 70% in the last 50 years.

The global demand for shark products continues to grow, with the global industry now worth over $1bn annually. Shark can be found in products ranging from pet food to make up, with Europe a major player in the global shark trade.

Will McCallum continued: “What’s happening in the North Atlantic is the perfect example of why, when it comes to ocean governance, the status quo is broken. We need a strong Global Ocean Treaty to be finalised this year, to fix this dysfunctional system and put ocean protection at the heart of global ocean governance. The final Treaty negotiations in August will be the EU’s chance to step up and prove it really does want to protect the oceans, by backing a Treaty that can create ocean sanctuaries on the high seas that will restore shark populations and help coastal communities.”

Governments will meet in August to finalise a new Global Ocean Treaty. A strong treaty would lay the foundations for 30×30, 30% of our planet’s ocean protected by 2030. Without a treaty being finalised this year, it will be nearly impossible to deliver 30×30.

Ends.

Photo and video of sharks being caught in the North Atlantic is available here

Contact:

James Hanson, Global Media Lead – james.hanson@greenpeace.org / +44 7801 212 994

 

Notes:

[1] Hooked on Sharks: The EU fishing fleets fuelling the global shark trade is available under embargo on request. The report is by Greenpeace UK and Greenpeace Spain. 

 

[2] Will McCallum is Head of Oceans at Greenpeace UK.