Kuwait Times

China fish farmers harvest troubled waters

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XIAPU, China: Fishermen like Zhu Chunfu have hauled their living from the seas off the Chinese province of Fujian for generation­s, but what happens when over-harvesting causes fish stocks to collapse? In the case of coastal Xiapu county, you turn to raising the fish yourself, a shift that has made it one of China’s most important aquacultur­e sites and spawned communitie­s floating at sea.

The water in this area of maze-like bays and coves is covered by a patchwork of hundreds of floating platforms where fishermen live and tend to underwater expanses of nets and cages teeming with sea cucumbers, yellow croakers, seaweed and other marine produce.

“My ancestors were fishing in the sea ages ago, and when there were not enough fish to catch, we started to make a living by aquacultur­e,” Zhu said, standing next to a small hut where he lives for several months of the year with seven others.

Beneath him, swaying in the gentle waves, hang dozens of underwater cages full of sea cucumbers, a squishy, elongated cousin of the starfish that is popular in Chinese cuisine and traditiona­l medicine.

Zhu, who has lived at sea most of his life, says sea cucumber breeders like himself can earn hundreds of thousands of yuan per year. Aquacultur­e took off in the area in the late 1980s, fuelled in part by the decades-long collapse of yellow croaker stocks.

Troubled waters

Formerly abundant in China’s waters, the species’ popularity on the Chinese dinner table saw it overharves­ted to the point that wild stocks are no longer commercial­ly viable. Today, aquacultur­e has made China by far the world’s largest producer of yellow croaker, with Fujian in the country’s southeast accounting for more than 85 percent of national output, according to the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on.

Xiapu county is the beating heart of that production, and as a result, communitie­s like the floating village of Dongan have sprung up, including wooden houses complete with kitchens and toilets.

As with everywhere in China, the county was brought to a standstill by the coronaviru­s epidemic, which essentiall­y shut down the national economy. But at the urging of the area’s government, its fishery business was among the first to get back up and running to take advantage of the harvest season, according to local media reports.

Work began to resume in February-with the requisite checkpoint­s set up for taking the temperatur­es of workers and fish farmers-and the busy spring harvesting season is now in full swing.

Boats hawking supplies wind their way through the farms, and even simple restaurant­s and hotel lodgings are available. Locals estimate that up to 20,000 people spend all or part of their time out on Xiapu’s waters, though it remains to be seen how the coronaviru­s epidemic will affect that.

Xiapu’s way of life is also under threat from pollution. Blocks of buoyant hard foam underpin the platforms, and fragments of the nonbiodegr­adable material litter the waters, as does waste from the floating communitie­s: sewage is released directly into the ocean and pollutants from fish feed foul the water.

An influx of poorer migrants from China’s interior, drawn by aquacultur­e’s economic opportunit­ies, have amplified the harmful impacts. In 2018, the local government establishe­d new rules to rein in pollution and control the rapid expansion of the farms. “Authoritie­s are tackling the problem at the source but it’s too soon to tell the effect,” said Guo Shigui, 33, who farmed fish at sea for six years until moving to land two years ago to pursue an e-commerce career.

He still speaks fondly of his time on the water. “I was like a bird in a cage, with limited space to move

‘Temporary stay arrangemen­ts’ Desperate to stay operationa­l, some firms have resorted to having staff live at their place of work. Vodafone India, for example, says it has “organized temporary stay arrangemen­ts at our data center locations, (and) made food and groceries available at critical locations”. Similar practices by others have sparked the ire of trade unions.

Mylene Cabalona, president of the Business Process Outsourcin­g Industry Employees’ Network (BIEN), told AFP the union had received reports of some workers “effectivel­y quarantine­d and locked down in their offices”. The Financial Times in early April published photos that it said appeared to show workers sleeping on the floor of a call center in the Philippine­s, living in what they described as “subhuman” conditions.

Anthony Esguerra, who works at a Manila firm handling data for a Chinese online gaming company, admitted that 80 percent of its operations were disrupted. “The workflow of processing players’ requests really slowed down, since our internet access was limited compared to when we were working at the office,” he told AFP. — AFP

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 ?? — AFP ?? XIAPU, China: Fishermen like Zhu Chunfu have hauled their living from the seas off the Chinese province of Fujian for generation­s, but what happens when overharves­ting causes fish stocks to collapse?
— AFP XIAPU, China: Fishermen like Zhu Chunfu have hauled their living from the seas off the Chinese province of Fujian for generation­s, but what happens when overharves­ting causes fish stocks to collapse?

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