Summer Fishing Moratorium Starts in East China Sea
By Dong Na
Beginning in May, the East China Sea is closed for fishing. 4,026 fishing boats in Ningbo are observing the longest-ever summer fishing moratorium of four and a half months.
Of Ningbo's fishing fleet, 2,544 vessels are in Xiangshan, 906 are in Fenghua, 280 are in Ninghai, and 296 are scattered across other counties.
From May 8th to August 1st, the city's aquatic product wholesale markets, farmers' markets, supermarkets, restaurants and other fishery-related businesses are prohibited from selling 8 kinds of chilled or live aquatic goods, including the hairtail, large yellow croaker, small yellow croaker, silver pomfret, mackerel, Gazami crab, dragon head fish, mantis shrimp, as well as other illegal catches.
In the week before the fishing ban, the daily sales volume of aquatic products in the Ningbo Aquatic Products Wholesale Market exceeded 550 tons, an increase of more than 100 tons compared with early April. Correspondingly, the price of aquatic products rose rapidly. The average price of many types of seafood is 20% to 30% higher than in early April. Some prices even doubled, such as in the case of the swimming crab.
At present, the Ningbo Aquatic Products Wholesale Market has 6,000 tons of frozen seafood in storage, sufficient to meet consumer demand for the coming months. The catch of freshwater fish and farmed seafood is expected to increase to make up for the supply gap during the fishing ban.
The summer fishing moratorium this year will have stricter, better-implemented regulations. A series of new rules have been launched at the provincial level. The locations and operations of fishing boats will be monitored more closely. For the first time in recent years, special enforcement measures were initiated before the May Day holiday.