What the organisers must know, but are keeping mum about, is that the oceans are in a parlous state. The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates that 70% of the world’s fisheries are now fully exploited (ie, fished to the point where they can only just replenish themselves), overexploited or depleted. The majority of fish populations have been reduced by 70-95%, depending on the species, compared to the level they would be at if there were no fishing at all. In other words, only five per cent of fish are left in some cases. In more practical terms, fishermen are catching one or two fish per 100 hooks, compared to 10 fish per 100 hooks where a stock is healthy and unexploited - a measure of sustainability once used by the Japanese fleet. In England and Wales, we are landing one fish for every 20 that we landed in 1889, when government records began, despite having larger vessels, more sophisticated technology and trawl nets so vast and all-consuming that they are capable of containing 12 Boeing 747 aircraft.
A Little Quart
by LEE XIAN JIE
No tuna, no salmon. No oysters, no skate. No cod and chips. Imagine a world without seafood for supper. It's nearer than you think.