February 11, 2019 โ A new index ranking vulnerability to illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing (IUU) by country has listed China as having the highest IUU potential.
The index, created by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime, ranks countries on a number of metrics, with a higher score meaning a higher likelihood that a countryโs policies are contributing to IUU fishing. The metrics have four main categories โ coastal, flag, port, and general โ which include subcategories like the size of the countryโs exclusive economic zone, or the number of distant-water vessels under regional fishery management organizations (RFMO).
China was by far the worst-ranked country, with a total โIUU scoreโ of 3.93 out of 5. China ranked the worst possible on a number of categories, including the number of vessels on the IUU list and the number of distant-water vessels that are under multiple RFMOs.
China also scored poorly in terms of its number of fishing ports, and how those ports allow foreign vessels and imports.
According to the initiative that started the index, itโs intended to be a tool to better understand illegal fishing worldwide.
โThe IUU Fishing Index has been designed to meet the need for a detailed analysis of fishery countriesโ vulnerability, exposure and responses to IUU fishing,โ the organization stated in a release. โIt fills a key gap by analyzing and evaluating, state by state, the global implications of IUU fishing, thereby helping policymakers identify where interventions are most needed.โ