'Somali piracy
'reduces tuna haul'
(Somalia, February
06, 2009 Ceegaag Online)
Piracy off Somalia's coast is a cause of
falls in tuna catches in the Indian Ocean - one of the
world's richest sources of the fish, experts say.
The head of the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission, Alejandro
Anganuzzi, said catches fell by about 30% last year,
seriously affecting the industry.
The Seychelles economy has been badly hit as many foreign
fishing fleets are based there.
The reduced supply because of piracy has also driven up
the price of tuna.
Ship seizures
The Indian Ocean tuna industry is said to be worth up to
$6bn.
Last year Somali pirates took 42 commercial ships with
crews hostage, according to the International Maritime
Bureau, including the biggest oil supertanker ever captured.
A number of countries began naval patrols off East Africa
and in the Gulf of Aden to try to combat the attacks.
With the threat still present, fishing fleets have had to
move further east from the Somali coast, Mr Anganuzzi told
Reuters news agency.
About 40% of Seychelles's foreign earnings come from tuna
and related industries, the IOTC said.
French and Spanish fleets based in Seychelles caught only
50% of their expected catch.
The fleets usually catch nearly two-thirds of the year's
haul off Somalia between August and November, he said.
Seychelles is paid per tonne of fish landed for port
facilities and reduced catches mean fewer calls to port.
"The pirates' biggest impact, however, is reduced supply,
driving prices up," the head of the Seychelles Fisheries
Authority, Rondolph Payet, told Reuters.
Source: BBC
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