Demand

Every year, between 63 and 273 million sharks die as a result of fishing.[1] This is likely an underestimate, as there is a lack of reliable data and the worldwide number of unreported cases of illegal fishing is extremely high. Sharks are hunted worldwide, primarily because of their fins. These are eaten especially in the Asian region as shark fin soup. you can be charged up to 90€ for this supposed delicacy, which contains only a few grams of fins.[2]  A lucrative business with huge profit margins at the expense of the sharks!

The fins are often collected in a cruel way by „finning“. Finning means that the sharks’ fins are cut off at sea whilst the animal may still be alive. The remainder of the shark gets thrown overboard because their meat is almost worthless compared to the fins. Without fins the sharks sink to the seabed where they suffocate, bleed to death or are eaten alive.

This shark fin business is also supplied from Europe.

Since 2013, the „Fins Naturally Attached“ regulation of the European Union prohibits without exception the storage, transhipment and landing of all shark fins in EU waters and on all EU ships. The fins must remain naturally attached to the carcass when the ship is unloaded in port. The fins can then be separated from the animal and exported to Asia.

In 2016 alone, Spain officially landed 53,000 tons of blue shark, equivalent to approximately 1,75 million animals.[3] Despite the increasing threat[4], for example the total catch of blue sharks in the Atlantic has almost doubled since the beginning of the millennium. In addition, other shark species, some of which are more endangered, such as the short-finned mako shark and the porbeagle are hunted in Europe.

This catch is worthwhile almost entirely because of the fins. On average, just under 3,500 tonnes of fins, with a total value of around 52 million euros[5], are exported from the EU each year.  As a result of sporadic inspections of fishing vessels at sea, nobody can say with certainty how many shark fins are still illegally landed in Europe.[6]

The situation in the global shark fin trade is even more disturbing. Only a few countries have passed a „Fins Naturally Attached“ law (e.g. USA, Canada, India, South Africa). In many countries finning is still allowed. Therefore, there is still a huge volume of fins on the global market, whose origin is rarely traceable.[8] However, these can still be traded legally in and across Europe.

The current Fins Naturally Attached Regulation states: „Sharks are not a traditional European food, but they are a necessary element of European marine ecosystems“. It is time to finally take consistent action in Europe to protect sharks and our oceans! Therefore, we ask you to support this opportunity to extend legislation in the European Union to protect our seas.

Support us at https://eci.ec.europa.eu/012/public

[1]    IUCN Shark Specialist Group, Frequently Asked Questions: Sharks, Rays, and chimaeras; https://www.iucnssg.org/faqs.html.
[2]    Kimley, Peter A. Peter, The Biology of Sharks and Rays, 2013, S. 451.
[3]    REGULATION (EU) No 605/2013 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 12 June 2013.
[4]    Bericht der Knorpelfisch-Arbeitsgruppe des International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), 2018. Für die Berechnung der Anzahl Tiere wurde ein durchschnittliches Gewicht von etwa 30 Kilogramm pro Blauhai angenommen.
[5]    IUCN Einstufung als “Near Threatened” / “an der Grenze zu bedroht” auf https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/39381/48924261.
[6]    Felix Dent, Shelley Clarke; State of the global market for shark products;FAO FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE TECHNICAL PAPER 590; Rom 2015; Seite 71ff.
[7]    Beobachterquote auf spanischen Langleinenflotten die im Atlantik Schwertfisch und Blauhai fangen beträgt lediglich 1-3%;  North and South Atlantic swordfish Spanish longline fishery; MSC Public Comment Draft Report, Volume 1; October 2016; Seite 44 pp .
[8]    Einmal vom Körper getrennt, lässt sich kaum noch feststellen, von welchem Tier die Flosse stammt. Ebenso betroffen wie die Haie sind deshalb übrigens auch Rochen: Wainwright, B.J., Ip, Y.C.A., Neo, M.L. et al. Conserv Gene, DNA barcoding of traded shark fins, meat and mobulid gill plates in Singapore uncovers numerous threatened species, 2018.