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US shrimpers call for investigation of uneven enforcement of import restrictions related to turtle-excluder device use

September 13, 2024 — Two trade groups representing U.S. shrimpers have requested the U.S. State Department more evenly enforce a rule prohibiting imports from countries that have not received certification they have required their wild-catch shrimp sectors to use of turtle-excluder devices.

The Southern Shrimp Alliance (SSA) and the Port Arthur Area Shrimpers’ Association (PAASA) said the federal government’s Section 609 program, made law in 1989, requires the U.S. State Department and NOAA Fisheries to certify foreign countries or fisheries as being in compliance with domestic requirements on the usage of turtle-excluder devices (TEDs), which allow turtles to escape from shrimp-trawler nets. The certification makes them eligible to export wild-caught shrimp to the U.S. market.

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

Shrimpers demand action on turtle conservation standards

September 3, 2024 — The Port Arthur Area Shrimpers’ Association (“PAASA”) and the Southern Shrimp Alliance jointly requested that the U.S. Department of State (“State Department”) re-visit and suspend the certifications granted to Peru and Guatemala under Section 609 of Public Law 101-162.

Based on a law enacted in 1989, the Section 609 program is intended to ensure that shrimp harvested in a manner that harms endangered sea turtles is not imported into the United States. Under the program, the State Department, working with officials from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (“NOAA”) Fisheries, certifies countries and/or individual fisheries as being in compliance with Section 609’s requirements and therefore eligible to supply the U.S. market with shrimp.

Read the full article at the National Fisherman

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