Rocky Point Talk archive

Embargo on Mexican shrimp

Started by Seadweller · Mar 5, 2010 · 2 replies
Seadweller
From CEDO... The U.S. State Department announced to the Mexican government that beginning April 20 there will be an embargo on Mexican shrimp because they do not take sufficient measures to protect sea turtles from being caught as bycatch in their trawlers.

this is the link posted on FaceBook the website is in Espaniol...

http://www.imagen.com.mx/noticia/primera/pulsonacional/eu_le_receta_a_mexico_embargo_camaronero/882330/excelsior/
Last edited: Mar 5, 2010 at 12:24 PM
Stuart
Well, it's sort of a non-event, since the shrimping season ends April 15th, if I'm not mistaken. At least for the commercials. This was over on the San Carlos board:

http://shrimpsuck.blogspot.com/2010/03/u-s-will-embargo-mexican-wild-shrimp_02.html

Tuesday, March 2, 2010
U. S. will embargo Mexican wild shrimp due to turtle issues starting April 20th

Posted: Tuesday, March 02, 2010

SEAFOOD.COM NEWS by John Sackton - March 2, 2010- Dick Gutting reported yesterday in a special Urner Barry trade alert that the U. S. State Department has decided to decertify Mexico under the U. S. regulations that require all wild shrimp imports to comply with U. S. turtle protection requirements.

US Inspectors found that some Mexican shrimp vessels were not using the required Turtle Excluder devices. (See seafood.com news Feb 26)

Sources say the violations were from the West Coast of Mexico and the Sea of Cortez. Mexico has a sufficient legal framework with regulations requiring the use of TED's, but apparently enforcement was the issue that concerned the inspectors.

The list of countries certified and decertified under turtle excluder rules is published annually by the U. S. State Department. Normally it is not very controversial, as countries that are not certified can get reinspected and reinstated.

For example, Honduras was decertified a few years ago, and re-instated four months later.

But in the case of Mexico, there are potential problems with recertification due to the Mexican shrimp seasons. Very little harvesting is done between April and September, meaning there will be little opportunity for re-inspection. This means that the re-inspection may not take place until the fall, which would potentially disrupt some Mexican wild shrimp exports. Farmed shrimp, and shrimp caught in artesenal fisheries that don't impact turtles, are exempt from the embargo so long as they have the proper certificates for export. The fact that artisenal fisheries are exempted may become an issue, as there are such fisheries in the Sea of Cortez who export product to the U.S.

Posted by OCEANREVOLUTION.org at 9:45 AM
Seadweller
Good point Stuart... as I recall back when we first moved down here they had a situation simular to this and they made all the shrimpers modify their nets with gaurds on them that a turtle couldn't fit through... obviously that didn't last...