Journal Article10.1126/science.abl4756
China’s seafood imports—Not for domestic consumption?
Frank Asche,Bixuan Yang,Jessica A. Gephart,Martin Smith,James L. Anderson,Edward V. Camp,Taryn Garlock,David C. Love,Atle Oglend,Hans-Martin Straume +9 more
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TL;DR: In this article , an estimated 74.9% of China's seafood imports are re-exported, which can exacerbate problems stemming from distant-water fishing (DWF), i.e., fish caught in international waters and other countries' economic zones.
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Abstract: Description An estimated 74.9% of China’s seafood imports are reexported Global trade in seafood is tightly coupled with environmental, economic, and social sustainability (1–3). Yet, two features of global seafood trade hamper efforts to promote sustainability. First, the recent practice of importing seafood, processing it, and then exporting it (“reexporting”) at a large scale complicates tracing seafood from the water to the plate and enables mislabeling (4). Second, reexports can exacerbate problems stemming from distant-water fishing (DWF), i.e., fish caught in international waters and other countries’ economic zones. DWF obscures the distinction between domestic and imported seafood and is implicated in illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing and other unsustainable practices (5). Both features highlight the critical role of China (5, 6), the world’s largest DWF nation and largest seafood producer, consumer, exporter, and importer (by volume). Contradicting the narrative that Chinese domestic demand is driving imports, we estimate that 74.9% of imports to China are processed and reexported.
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References
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TL;DR: Analysis of patterns in the development of aquaculture production by analyzing growth rates across the globe at the regional, species and country levels shows that production in some non-Asian countries is growing more rapidly than the major Asian producers.
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Fair Enough? Food Security and the International Trade of Seafood
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the relationship between food security and international trade of fish and seafood between developing and developed countries and found that developing countries export high-quality seafood in exchange for lower quality seafood.
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China's distant-water fisheries in the 21st century
Daniel Pauly,Dyhia Belhabib,Roland Blomeyer,William W. L. Cheung,Andrés M. Cisneros-Montemayor,Duncan Copeland,Sarah Harper,Vicky W. Y. Lam,Yining Mai,Frédéric Le Manach,Frédéric Le Manach,Henrik Österblom,Ka Man Mok,Liesbeth van der Meer,Antonio Sanz,Soohyun Shon,U. Rashid Sumaila,Wilf Swartz,Reg Watson,Yunlei Zhai,Dirk Zeller +20 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors estimate the distant-water fleet catch of the People's Republic of China for 2000-2011, using a newly assembled database of reported occurrence of Chinese fishing vessels in various parts of the world and information on the annual catch by vessel type.
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Structure and evolution of the global seafood trade network
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204
Markets and rent dissipation in regulated open access fisheries
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TL;DR: In this paper, a model of regulated open access resource use with markets is used to illustrate the potential complexity of interactions between markets, product quality, excess effort, and regulatory behavior in fisheries.
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