Global per capita fish consumption rises above 20 kilograms a year
FAO’s new State of World Fisheries
and Aquaculture report urges more work to rein in over fishing
Global per capita
fish consumption has risen to above 20 kilograms a year for the first
time, thanks to stronger aquaculture supply and firm demand, record
hauls for some key species and reduced wastage, according to a new
FAO report published today.
Yet despite notable progress in some
areas, the state of the world's marine resources has not improved,
the latest edition of the UN agency's The State of World Fisheries
and Aquaculture (SOFIA) says that almost a third of commercial fish
stocks are now fished at biologically unsustainable levels, triple
the level of 1974.
Global total capture fishery production
in 2014 was 93.4 million tonnes, including output from inland waters,
up slightly over the previous two years. Alaska pollock was the top
species, replacing anchoveta for the first time since 1998 and
offering evidence that effective resource management practices have
worked well. Record catches for four highly valuable groups - tunas,
lobsters, shrimps and cephalopods - were reported in 2014.
There were around 4.6 million fishing
vessels in the world in 2014, 90 percent of which are in Asia and
Africa, and only 64,000 of which were 24 meters or longer, according
to SOFIA.
Globally, fish provided 6.7 percent of
all protein consumed by humans, as well as offering a rich source of
long-chain omega-3 fatty acids, vitamins, calcium, zinc and iron.
Some 57 million people were engaged in the primary fish production
sectors, a third of them in aquaculture.
Fishery products accounted for one
percent of all global merchandise trade in value terms, representing
more than nine percent of total agricultural exports. Worldwide
exports amounted to $148 billion in 2014, up from $8 billion in 1976.
Developing countries were the source of $80 billion of fishery
exports, providing higher net trade revenues than meat, tobacco, rice
and sugar combined.
"Life below water, which the
Sustainable Development Agenda commits us to conserve, is a major
ally in our effort to meet a host of challenges, from food security
to climate change," FAO Director-General José Graziano da
Silva. "This report shows that capture fisheries can be managed
sustainably, while also pointing to the enormous and growing
potential of aquaculture to boost human nutrition and support
livelihoods with productive jobs."
Aquaculture
That the global supply of fish for
human consumption has outpaced population growth in the past five
decades - preliminary estimates suggest per capita intakes higher
than 20 kilograms, double the level of the 1960s - is due in large
measure to growth in aquaculture.
The sector's global production rose to
73.8 million tonnes in 2014, a third of which comprised molluscs,
crustaceans and other non-fish animals. Importantly in terms of both
food security and environmental sustainability, about half of the
world's aquaculture production of animals - often shellfish and carp
- and plants - including seaweeds and microalgae - came from non-fed
species.
While China remains far the leading
nation for aquaculture, it is expanding even faster elsewhere, the
report notes. In Nigeria, aquaculture output is up almost 20-fold
over the past two decades, and all of sub-Saharan Africa is not far
behind. Chile and Indonesia have also posted remarkable growth, as
have Norway and Vietnam - now the world's No. 2 and No. 3 fish
exporters.
Aquaculture's strengths and challenges
are also influencing what fish end up on our plates. The report shows
that, measured as a share of world trade in value terms, salmon and
trout are now the largest single commodity, an honor that for decades
belonged to shrimp.
The state of sustainability
Some 31.4 percent of the commercial
wild fish stocks regularly monitored by FAO were overfished in 2013,
a level that has been stable since 2007.
FAO's methodology is consistent with
international agreements stating that fish stocks should be
maintained at or rebuilt to a size that can support Maximum
Sustainable Yield (MSY). Thus, stocks are classified as being fished
at biologically unsustainable levels - overfished - when they have an
abundance lower than the level that can produce the Maximum
Sustainable Yield.
Decreased fish landings have been
observed in some regions due to the implementation of effective
management regulations, like in the Northwest Atlantic, where the
annual catch is now less than half the level of the early 1970s.
Halibut, flounder and haddock stocks in that area are showing signs
of recovery, although that is not yet the case for cod.
Management measures also appear to be
working for the highly-priced Patagonian toothfish - a type of
whitefish from Antarctica often marketed (in U.S. restaurants) as
Chilean sea bass - as the catch of that fish in Antarctic waters has
been stable since 2005. Catches of Antarctic krill, which feed
directly on phytoplankton, jumped substantially to levels not reached
since the early 1990s, while being maintained at sustainable levels.
The report described the situation in
the Mediterranean and Black Sea - where 59% of assessed stocks are
fished at biologically unsustainable levels - as "alarming".
This is especially true for larger fish such as hake, mullet, sole
and sea breams. In the Eastern Mediterranean, the possible expansion
of invasive fish species associated to climate change is a concern.
FAO continues to work with all
countries to improve the quality and reliability of annual landing
figures. The doubling since 1996 of the number of species in the FAO
data base - now 2,033 - indicates overall quality improvements in the
data collected, according to the report.
Supply-chain and other improvements
have also raised the share of world fish production utilized for
direct human consumption to 87 percent or 146 million tonnes in 2016,
according to the report. That's up from 85 percent or 136 million
tonnes in 2014.
The growing fish-processing sector also
offers opportunities to improve the sustainability of the fish supply
chain, as a host of byproducts have multiple potential and actual
uses, ranging from fishmeal for aquaculture, through collagen for the
cosmetics industry to small fish bones humans can eat as snacks.
Comments
Post a Comment