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posted by CoolHand on Tuesday August 11 2015, @08:56PM   Printer-friendly
from the tasty-little-morsels dept.

Original URL: Ocean threat from Hong Kong's taste for seafood

A seafood lunch in Hong Kong is enjoyed by locals and visitors alike, but with threatened species on the menu and fishing practices that endanger marine life, campaigners want to change the city's appetite.

Hong Kong is the second-largest consumer of seafood per capita in Asia—an average resident consumes 71.2 kilos (157 pounds) of seafood each year, more than four times the global average, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature Hong Kong.

Yet the city of seven million has been forced to become one of the biggest seafood importers in the world as local waters are depleted of fish stocks.

Whether in high-end restaurants or waterside eateries, seafood is ubiquitous in the southern Chinese city, where customers often choose their fish live from a tank.

Baked lobster with noodles in cheese and deep-fried prawns in salted egg yolk are among local favourites.

But a "fish tank index" compiled by WWF Hong Kong found that more than 50 percent of the species available in the city's traditional restaurant tanks were from "highly unsustainable" sources.

"Overfishing is driving the collapse of the world's ocean fish stocks and edging many types of fish towards extinction, yet they are still on our menus," WWF Hong Kong conservation director Gavin Edwards told AFP.

"Hong Kong has a special responsibility to turn the tide as one of the biggest consumers of seafood."


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Nerdfest on Tuesday August 11 2015, @09:26PM

    by Nerdfest (80) on Tuesday August 11 2015, @09:26PM (#221459)

    "Social Responsibility" seems near non-existent in the Western world and even worse in China. No raindrop feels responsible for the flood.

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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 11 2015, @10:25PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 11 2015, @10:25PM (#221477)

    For what it is worth, most western consumers eat almost exclusively from sustainable, domesticated stock. Hogs, chicken, and cattle are as sustainable as meat gets.

    Where I live taxes that go to replenishing any wild fish stock every few years and there is a short leash on mammal hunting licenses to keep the population from being over-hunted or burning itself out.

    When it comes to meat those "country rednecks" with their guns, fishing poles, and tractors are as socially responsible as it gets. Their lives, culture, and even entertainment depend on it and they know it.

  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Francis on Tuesday August 11 2015, @11:50PM

    by Francis (5544) on Tuesday August 11 2015, @11:50PM (#221499)

    It depends what you mean by "western world." Around here most of the fisheries have bounced back after decades of overfishing with many of the species available for harvesting again.It's mostly things like tuna that cross over multiple jurisdictions that are the problem. You still have to pay attention to what is and isn't sustainable if you care about it being available in the future, but most of the local stocks are back to a level where you can eat them without any reason for guilt.

    Locally, we made some hard decisions, drastically cut back the limits, bought boats and after years of lower catches they're able to start fishing more again. But, it was a priority, fishing is one of our biggest industries, so it was either pain then or pain later. Either a bit of a haircut and hopefully fish in the future or fish the hell out of them now and definitely not have any in the future.