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EU shark finning ban ineffective, campaigners say
17 May 2007 16:10:05 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Jeremy Lovell

LONDON, May 17 (Reuters) - The European Union's shark finning regulations are hopelessly inadequate, allowing vast numbers of sharks to be killed, finned and dumped at sea in secret, a report by a conservation group said on Thursday.

The Shark Alliance, a coalition of 30 non-government organisations dedicated to protecting sharks, said the lax EU regulations were wiping out shark populations and had to be completely overhauled as soon as possible.

The bloc brought in a ban on simple finning -- cutting the high value fins off the shark and dumping the low value carcass at sea -- in 2003.

But its fin to carcass weight ratio monitoring system that is supposed to match the fins to the number of carcasses on board is double that used by other nations and allows shark fishermen to continue dumping large numbers of finned carcasses at sea.

"The shark finning ban is one of the only measures the EU has to safeguard its declining shark populations, and yet this key regulation is deeply flawed," said Shark Alliance director Uta Bellion.

The report, following a meeting of experts last year, concluded that the EU had to ban finning at sea and insist that all sharks be landed intact instead.

The IUCN -- the World Conservation Union - concluded last year that 20 percent of the world's 547 shark and ray species were faced with extinction due to over-fishing.

China is the world's biggest consumer of shark fins where they command top prices to be made into shark fin soup.

The EU is the largest supplier of shark fins to China, with Spain the leading exporter.

"Shark fisheries have boomed in recent decades as international demand has risen for shark products," added Sarah Fowler, Co-Chair for the IUCN Shark Specialist Group and one of the lead authors of the report.

"Shark fins, exported to Asia for shark fin soup, are now among the most expensive seafood products in the world, fetching up to 500 euros ($676) per kilogram. The effects of this demand on shark populations have been ignored for much too long."
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A farmer works at a field where crop stubbles were burned, on the outskirts of Shijiazhuang, northern China's Hebei province June 15, 2007. China has issued an urgent ban on farmers burning crop stubble around the nation's capital after days of eye-watering haze that provoked complaints from national leaders.



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