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What You Don't See on Your Plate: The Urgency of Fisheries Transparency. By Ted Danson, actor and Oceana Board Member

What You Don't See on Your Plate: The Urgency of Fisheries Transparency. By Ted Danson, actor and Oceana Board Member

Written by: Ted Danson, actor, environmental advocate and member of Oceana's Board of Directors

Fish and seafood are a staple in my home—fish tacos, paella, sushi. But no matter how good they taste, I can't help but wonder: Was it caught responsibly? Or did something terrible happen before it reached my plate?

This June, when world leaders gather in Nice, France, for the third United Nations Ocean Conference, they will face a harsh reality: a lack of transparency at sea is facilitating illegal fishing and undermining efforts to protect our oceans.

Too often, a dangerous blind spot lurks behind the global seafood trade. Unscrupulous actors exploit the vastness of the ocean to fish illegally and launder their catches within the supply chain, often with devastating consequences for marine wildlife, coastal communities, and the fishers who legally operate in this industry.

This means that the fish and seafood at your favorite supermarket or restaurant could be linked to these illicit activities, and you'd have no way of knowing. But it doesn't have to be that way.

In 2023 , Oceana — an organization of which I serve on the Board of Directors — analyzed fishing activity near Ecuador’s iconic Galapagos Islands, a marine protected area since 1998. What we found was alarming: hundreds of industrial fishing vessels , mostly flagged in China but also in Spain, Panama, and Ecuador, clustered near the edge of the protected area, then disappeared after their satellite tracking devices were disabled.

This type of behavior is often a sign that something is wrong. A vessel could be trying to hide its location to fish illegally, operate in another country's waters without permission, or unload its catch undetected.

Even where rules exist, they are often broken. The European Union, for example, requires vessels longer than 15 meters to keep their tracking systems on at all times, unless there is a legitimate safety concern. However, in our analysis of fishing around the Galapagos, 24 Spanish-flagged vessels disappeared for more than 35,000 hours combined.

Fifty-three Chinese-flagged vessels disappeared for nearly 27,000 hours, and almost all recorded possible encounters or transshipment activities, where fishing boats transfer their catch to refrigerated cargo vessels on the high seas. Although this practice is not illegal, it is often used to mix legal and illegal seafood, making it nearly impossible to track them.

If these actions continue unchecked, local fishermen could soon return home empty-handed.

However, there is a better way. In 2023, artisanal dorado fishermen in San Mateo, Ecuador, where 90% of the community depends on artisanal fishing, implemented a A pioneering program to build trust and traceability. Their vessels were equipped with cameras and digital tracking systems. Catch data was integrated into QR codes, allowing buyers to trace each fish back to the vessel and the people who caught it.

Peru is also taking action. The government is working to ensure that every vessel fishing for human consumption is tracked and reports its catches. This isn't just a top-down regulation; artisanal fishers are leading these initiatives, alongside organizations like Oceana.

And at the end of April, the governments of Cameroon, Ghana, and South Korea endorsed the Global Charter for Fisheries Transparency during the Our Ocean conference. But much remains to be done.

The upcoming United Nations Ocean Conference represents a key opportunity for other governments around the world to follow this example and commit to greater transparency and accountability in global fisheries. This includes requiring all vessels to keep their tracking systems on at all times, cracking down on those who disappear at sea, and supporting programs that help fishers demonstrate they are complying with the rules.

We already have the tools. Platforms like Global Fishing Watch allow anyone to track fishing vessels in near real time using satellite data. But to close the gaps, we need governments to act.

Our oceans are not the Wild West. They are a shared resource and a shared responsibility. By committing to transparency, we can protect marine ecosystems, ensure fair conditions for honest fishers, and give consumers the confidence that their fish and seafood is safe, legally caught, and labeled with integrity.

The future of our oceans depends on what we do now. We cannot lose sight of what's at stake.

Ted Danson Actor, environmental advocate, and member of Oceana's Board of Directors

About @CDOverde Arturo Larena, director of EFEverde.com, moderates the discussion at the Última Hora/Valores Forum organized by the Serra Group in Palma de Mallorca.

Green Opinion Makers #CDO is a collective blog coordinated by Arturo Larena , director of EFEverde

This column may be freely reproduced, citing its authors and EFEverde.

Other Green Opinion Makers (#CDO) forums

This "green influencer" blog has been a finalist in the 2023 Orange Journalism and Sustainability Awards in the "new formats" category.

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