Hosted on MSN1mon
Climate change is robbing Pacific islands of another resource: Tunamore than 80 percent — from companies fishing for tuna-consuming countries such as Japan, China, South Korea and the United States. As oceans warm, these tuna stocks will be driven out of their ...
His small-scale Indonesian tuna fishery became the first in the country to hold Fairtrade and MSC, two certifications for sustainable fishing practices.
Muhammad Syafi’i remembers screaming in pain as hot cooking oil splashed across his stomach and dripped down his legs, his ...
3d
Mongabay News on MSNRep from American Samoa calls for opening protected Pacific waters to tuna fishingBy Edward Carver U.S. Congresswoman Amata Radewagen, who represents American Samoa, has urged the Trump administration to ...
At least a dozen Chinese-flagged tuna longliners ... then the country closed its borders. China and Taiwan account for 60 percent of the world's distant-water fishing fleet, with Japan, South ...
The global canned tuna market is expected to expand significantly, growing from USD 11,158.4 million in 2025 to USD 17,832.6 million by 2035 at a CAGR of 4.8% during the forecast period. The ...
Japanese have been eating tuna fish from far back in the country's history. Tuna bones were among the items discovered in a heap of kitchen waste in Iwate Prefecture dating from the prehistoric ...
Of that total, 80 percent came from imports and fish farms. The remaining supply was caught in the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. Japan is expected to bolster its tuna imports as other countries ...
The Ghana Tuna Association (GTA) has expressed concern over the current fishing licence regime, describing it as too expensive. The Association said its previous concern over the amount and ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results