Caspian Caviar Quotas but Beluga in Limbo

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    Caspian Caviar Quotas but Beluga in Limbo



        
     
     January 2007  - Exports of caviar 
    from three Caspian Sea sturgeon species will be permitted this 
    year by the international organization that controls trade in 
    the luxury delicacy after a year when no Caspian exports were 
    allowed. Exports of beluga, the world’s most valuable caviar, 
    are not yet authorized for 2007. 
    The Secretariat of the Convention on International Trade in 
    Endangered Species, CITES, today published export quotas for 
    Russian, Persian and stellate sturgeon caviar and meat from 
    the Caspian for 2007. 
    In 2006, the Secretariat did not publish caviar quotas for the 
    Caspian Sea’s sturgeon fisheries because the five countries 
    concerned - Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia, and 
    Turkmenistan - did not provide enough information about the 
    sustainability of their sturgeon catch. 
    "The decision taken by CITES last year not to publish caviar 
    quotas has undoubtedly helped to spur improvements to the 
    monitoring programs and scientific assessments carried out 
    jointly by the five Caspian neighbors," said CITES 
    Secretary-General Willem Wijnstekers. 
    CITES Secretary-General Willem Wijnstekers (Photo courtesy 
    Earth Negotiations Bulletin) 
    "However, ensuring that sturgeon stocks recover to safe levels 
    will take decades of careful fisheries management and an 
    unrelenting struggle against poaching and illegal trade," he 
    said. 
    It has not been possible to publish quotas for beluga, because 
    the information provided by the five range States is not yet 
    complete, Wijnstekers said. 
    Tasked by the 169 CITES member states with ensuring that all 
    required criteria and procedures for publishing sturgeon and 
    caviar quotas have been met, the Secretariat has granted the 
    range states until the end of January 2007 in order to give this species a chance 
    to recover. 
    Dr. Ellen Pikitch of the Pew Institute for Ocean Science said, 
    "The most recent data shows that the condition of the highly 
    endangered beluga sturgeon is worsening, and it would be 
    unconscionable for CITES to open the beluga caviar trade." 
    In a statement today, Caviar Emptor said "no direct evidence" 
    has been provided to back CITES' claims that the Caspian 
    sturgeon range states have made improvements to monitoring 
    programs and scientific assessments. 
    Instead, the groups said, "dramatic population declines and an 
    illegal caviar trade three to five times greater than the 
    legal trade speaks to the contrary." 
    "The Caspian stellate sturgeon population is only 10 percent 
    of what it was in 1978, and Russian sturgeon has declined 50 
    percent during the same period. The 2007 export quotas for 
    Russian sturgeon are 23 percent higher than they were in 2005, 
    the last time quotas were published, despite any evidence that 
    the health of the species has improved," said Caviar Emptor. 
    Russian fisherman exults over landing a great white sturgeon. 
    (Photo credit unknown) 
    But CITES says sturgeon conservation depends on the sale of 
    sturgeon products. "The income earned from the sale of 
    sturgeon products in 2007 should provide both an incentive and 
    the means to pursue the long-term recovery of this 
    commercially and ecologically valuable natural resource," 
    Wijnstekers said today. 
    The conservationists say exports of Russian beluga caviar 
    should not be allowed under any circumstances. Citing 
    documents submitted by the Russian Federation at a CITES’ 
    policymaking meeting in October 2006 that reveal a 45 percent 
    decline in the beluga sturgeon population between 2004 and 
    2005, they say the species is in "grave danger" and "should 
    not be commercially exploited." 
    CITES says the Caspian Sea countries have recognized the 
    decline in sturgeon stocks and have agreed amongst themselves 
    to reduce the combined catch quotas for the sea’s six sturgeon 
    species by an average of 20 percent compared with 2005, with 
    reductions of one third for some species. 
    The combined quotas for caviar exports are 15 percent lower 
    than for 2005, the last year for which quotas were published, 
    CITES says. Quotas for caviar exports from Persian and 
    stellate sturgeon have been reduced by over 25 percent. 
    Last year, Caspian export quotas were not set due to what 
    Caviar Emptor says was the Caspian nations’ "failure to take 
    into account the extent of illegal fishing and the lack of a 
    basin-wide sturgeon management plan in the region." 
    Export quotas were approved in 2006 only for Persian sturgeon 
    caviar from Iran. 
    Caviar harvested in Russia's Astrakhan Oblast on the Volga 
    River Delta. (Photo courtesy Eurasia) 
    Recognizing that sturgeon stocks in the Black Sea and lower 
    Danube River have been seriously depleted, Bulgaria, Romania, 
    Serbia and Ukraine have requested zero quotas for 2007. 
    While Serbia requested a small quota for beluga caviar 
    exports, no quota has been published owing to a lack of 
    agreement amongst the range states. 
    In the case of the Heilongjiang/Amur River on the Sino-Russian 
    border, a fishery shared by China and Russia, the CITES 
    Secretariat is seeking further clarification of information 
    submitted by the states concerned and has not been able to 
    publish a quota at this stage. 
    Caviar importers also have an important role to play in 
    sturgeon conservation. Wijnstekers said, "They must ensure 
    that all imports are from legal sources, and they must 
    establish registration systems for their domestic processing 
    and repackaging plants and rules for the labeling of 
    repackaged caviar." 
    Since April 1, 1998, all sturgeon species have been listed on 
    CITES Appendix II, which allows trade only under permit and 
    with specific labeling requirements. 
    In 2001, CITES responded to high levels of poaching and 
    illegal trade in the Caspian Sea with a temporary export ban. 
    Annual quotas were agreed for 2002 to 2005 but not for 2006. 
    Several varieties of caviar, including beluga caviar, for sale 
    in Istanbul, Turkey. (Photo by Emma Duncan courtesy WWF-Canon) 
    
    To have their proposed quotas published, countries with shared 
    sturgeon stocks must agree amongst themselves on catch and 
    export quotas based on scientific surveys of the stocks. 
    They must also adopt a regional conservation strategy, combat 
    illegal fishing and demonstrate that their proposed catch and 
    export quotas reflect current population trends and are 
    sustainable. 
    The CITES regime requires caviar and other sturgeon products 
    to be sold during the same calendar year in which the fish are 
    caught. Because caviar is a popular local delicacy in many of 
    these countries, Wijnstekers says they must focus on 
    strengthening their controls over domestic trade in sturgeon. 
    Reduced supplies of caviar from the wild have encouraged many 
    countries to establish aquaculture facilities for sturgeon, 
    but "in order to preserve incentives for the conservation of 
    wild sturgeon stocks it is important to maintain a catch of 
    these fish at sustainable levels," Wijnstekers says. 
    The conservationists of Caviar Emptor recommend consumption of 
    farmed caviar purchased from reputable dealers, which they say 
    reduces pressure on wild sturgeon species and frees consumers 
    from worry about the possible illegality of their delicious 
    treat. 
    "While Caviar Emptor calls upon CITES to keep the beluga 
    caviar trade closed, the good news is that farmed caviar is a 
    wonderful delicacy that consumers can still enjoy," said Dawn 
    Martin, president of SeaWeb. "Consumers who choose farmed 
    caviar this year can do so with a clean conscience knowing 
    that their actions may well be the only hope to relieve 
    pressure on these ancient species." 
    







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