Snowe Lauds Votes to Reject Export Ban on Bluefin Tuna
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WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Olympia J. Snowe (R-Maine), Ranking
Member of the Senate Subcommittee on Oceans, Atmosphere, Fisheries and
Coast Guard, today lauded the results of two votes by a working group of
the 175th-nation Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species (CITES) in which nations rejected petitions by Monaco and the
European Union to list bluefin tuna as an endangered species.
"From the outset I have opposed this misguided policy,
and I applaud today's decision to reject proposals to list bluefin tuna
under Appendix I of CITES. Approval of this listing would have had
crippling effects on the U.S. bluefin tuna fishery, and
institutionalized a perverse incentive by effectively punishing
countries like the U.S. that attempt to impose responsible domestic
fisheries management," said Senator Snowe. "Indeed, today’s decision is
the right tonic at the right time. It will allow domestic and
international managers to continue to move forward with the vital work
of rebuilding drastically overfished stocks without imposing the burden
of unnecessary and punitive trade barriers."
Since the announcement earlier this month that the US would
support Monaco's proposal to list the bluefin tuna as endangered under
Appendix I of CITES, Senator Snowe has called the decision reckless and
said it would ultimately prove ineffectual and cause disproportionate
harm to the U.S. bluefin tuna fishery. Most recently, Senator Snowe met
with Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Tom Strickland, Assistant
Secretary for Fish, Wildlife, and Parks, who led the U.S. delegation to
CITES, and further reiterated her opposition.
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