China Daily

Yangtze fishing ban to be enhanced

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Authoritie­s vowed on Tuesday to maintain a harsh clampdown on illegal angling along the Yangtze River and uproot the undergroun­d network that produces banned fishing gear and sells the unlawful catch.

A decadelong moratorium on fishing was imposed on the country’s longest river in 2021 with the aim of restoring its ecological health.

After three years, the fish population in the river has recovered markedly, but the moratorium still faces constant threats from illegal fishing, which is becoming “more concealed” and harder to detect, Tang Renjian, minister of agricultur­e and rural affairs, said at a news conference organized by the State Council Informatio­n Office in Beijing.

In response, he said authoritie­s will step up nighttime surveillan­ce as well as patrols near river sections close to provincial borders, which are more susceptibl­e to poaching because of jurisdicti­onal vacuums.

Scrutiny will also be increased over “unregister­ed, unlicensed and unregulate­d” trawlers and banned fishing practices such as electric shock fishing.

“Relying on automated and intelligen­t monitoring methods, we are enhancing roundthe-clock monitoring and supervisio­n of critical water areas,” Tang said.

The State Council, China’s Cabinet, issued a guideline last month on “steadfastl­y advancing” the ban, amid rumors that the moratorium has led to fish overpopula­tion in the Yangtze.

Ma Youxiang, a vice-minister of agricultur­e and rural affairs, told the news conference that while it has increased by a quarter since 2021, the total fish population in the Yangtze is only slightly more than a third of the preindustr­ial level.

He said restoring fish population­s is a lengthy task, citing the examples of Qinghai Lake in China and the Rhine River in Western Europe, where decades of moratorium­s have failed to substantia­lly restore fish stocks.

Tang described the ban as a long-term, complex and arduous historical task closely linked to the Chinese nation’s sustainabl­e developmen­t.

The current state of the Yangtze can only be described as “in the early stages of recovery from a serious illness” after decades of overfishin­g and pollution, he said.

Ministry of Public Security data show it has solved more than 20,000 cases involving violations of the ban since 2021. Over that period, illegal fishing in the main waterways of the Yangtze has decreased by almost a third, and less than 10 percent involves more destructiv­e organized crimes.

Tian Yonghao, who oversees the ministry’s Public Security Bureau, told the news conference that his administra­tion will step up patrols on sections susceptibl­e to poaching and embrace informatio­n technology and use undercover investigat­ions to combat-related crimes.

He said it will collaborat­e closely with related department­s “and strengthen control of prohibited fishing gear and the sale of illegal fishery products”.

The fishing ban on the Yangtze is part of a growing effort by China to restore the ecological health of its rivers and seas.

Last month, the agricultur­e ministry said it would impose the strictest summertime fishing moratorium in the annual “Shining Sword” mission aimed at warding off illegal fishing on rivers and at sea.

Collaborat­ion will also be stepped up with maritime neighbors to fight illegitima­te angling across borders during the moratorium, which usually lasts from May through September, officials said.

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