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Filets for France Fish-heads for the Philippines

Filets for France Fish-heads for the Philippines. International fish trade, tariff reduction and sustainability. Prepared by Marc Allain for Greenpeace International WTO Public Forum September 26, 2006. World Fisheries Production.

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Filets for France Fish-heads for the Philippines

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  1. Filets for France Fish-heads for the Philippines International fish trade, tariff reduction and sustainability Prepared by Marc Allain for Greenpeace International WTO Public Forum September 26, 2006

  2. World Fisheries Production Source: FAO, Review of the state of world marine fishery resources (2005)

  3. World Fish Trade Export Value- in 1000 US$ -

  4. World Fish Trade Export Value- in 1000 US$ -

  5. World Fish Trade Export Volume- in MT -

  6. World Fish Trade Value per ton US$

  7. Import value distribution Main markets (% 2004)

  8. Trade flows(2002 Export values %) High value species/products flow North (shrimp, salmon, tuna, grounfish, lobster, octopus) North ↦ North ↤ South (42 %) (43%) Low value species/products flow South (pelagics/fishmeal & oil) North ↦ South ↤ South (6.5%) (8.5%)

  9. Trade flows High net surplus in fish trade for Developing countries (20 Billion US$ - 2004) • LIFDC: • 9 billion US$ net surplus (2003) • Helps reduce balance of payments problem

  10. Tariff overview main markets EU • MFN average for seafood 12% • Lots of tariff peaks and tariff escalation US • Seafood tariffs much lower than EU • Anti-dumping levies very high (shrimp/catfish) Japan • Seafood tariffs higher than US lower than EU • Some tariff escalation & peaks • Import quotas

  11. Theory of fish trade liberalization • Tariff cuts change price • Consumers pay less • Producers get paid more • Price change increases supply • In fisheries supply can only increase up to maximum sustainable levels

  12. Theory of fish trade liberalization • Ineffective management leads to overfishing and depletion. • Fish trade liberalization can only bring sustainable benefits if effective fisheries management exists in both exporting and importing countries.

  13. State of the World’s stocks

  14. Long term stock trends

  15. UNEP case studies • Mauritania, Argentina & Senegal • Duty free access to EU for fish exports in exchange for EU access to stocks

  16. Mauritania • Duty free access to EU in 1987 • Majority of demersal species now over-exploited. • Shark and ray stocks heading towards extinction • Previously plentiful species have disapeared from Mauritanian waters • Discards and dumping so voluminouscreating marine polution problems • Food security worsening • Government under IFI pressure to sell off fisheries resources to meet minimal economic growth targets.

  17. Argentina • Duty free access to EU 1994 • Fish production & exports increased rapidly in a context of “enormous deficiencies” in fisheries management. • In 97 TAC exceeded by 111%. • By 2002 – 6 Argentine stocks endangered

  18. Externalizing the costs Cost benefit analysis of argentine hake fishery: • Private fish companies: + 1.6 billion US$ • Fishworkers: + 1.4 billion US$ • Argentine state: + .05 billion US$ • Future generations -3.5 billion US$ “The market is short sighted with respect to any concern for future generations and a sustainable environment.”

  19. Senegal • Duty free access to EU has created a conservation crisis & undermined food security. • Catch rates falling for all species but export species especially high/some threatened with extinction. • Export species being fished before they reach sexual maturity • Dragging in offshore areas has destroyed & changed habitat, eroded biodiversity & induced ecological replacement. • Quantity & quality of domestic supply diminished & costs to consumers increasing.

  20. Conclusions • Senegal, Mauritania, Argentina are not exceptions in fisheries management. • Developing countries • Can’t afford fisheries management. • Squeezed by IFIs to increase exports. • Preyed upon by fishing nations.

  21. Conclusions • Only handful of fish exporting developed countries will benefit longterm from tariff cuts: Canada, Norway, Island, New Zealand. • Short/medium term gains for Thailand. • All others will lose.

  22. Conclusions • Tariff cuts in this context will only accelerate resource depletion, loss of biodiversity, undermine food security, livelihoods and employment in LDCs. • When this happens we all lose.

  23. Conclusions • Fundamental incoherence of Doha. • If Doha is about sustainable trade & development for LDCs then it can’t be about fisheries.

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