China Daily

Fishermen set sail as moratorium ends

- By ZHAO YIMENG zhaoyimeng@chinadaily.com.cn Ma Zhenhuan in Hangzhou and Cang Wei in Nanjing contribute­d to this story.

The fishing moratorium in the East China Sea was partially lifted on Monday and the first fleet of more than 1,100 fishing boats in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province set sail.

Fishing boats in coastal cities including Zhoushan and Ningbo also upped anchor and set sail after the three-month ban, which means consumers will soon have an abundance of fresh fish, shrimp and crab on their tables.

Unlike previous years, the fishing boats setting out from Wenzhou this year are more intelligen­t and are equipped with new technologi­es such as broadband access at sea and telephones to improve communicat­ion efficiency, Zhejiang Daily reported.

“After renovation, the fishing boats will be safer and more comfortabl­e. I hope I will be lucky enough to fill the hold and come back soon,” said Lin Houwu, a captain.

In Ningbo, fishermen, mainly concentrat­ed in Xiangshan, will fish for shrimp and swimming crab.

The first catches from the East China Sea will be sold to the market two or three days after they are caught at sea, based on previous experience.

Zhou Haiping, a fishing boat captain in Hangzhou, said he and his crew would set sail Monday noon and return on Wednesday, according to Hangzhou Daily.

“The population of swimming crab has recuperate­d during the fishing moratorium. A large number of them will be seen on the market in Hangzhou by Friday,” Zhou said.

Swimming crabs are a bestseller in the livestream­ing market, where broadcaste­rs presell seafood to customers nationwide.

Zhou Juan, an aquatic product merchant in Hangzhou, is optimistic about sales of swimming crab this year.

“Seafood population­s have gradually returned to the same level as when I was a child thanks to the fishing ban promoted in recent years, though it has not yet reached the peak like when the fishing nets were bursting with crabs. Fishermen’s catches have indeed improved a lot,” she said.

To ensure the navigation­al safety of commercial fishing boats, local maritime safety and agricultur­e administra­tions have arranged for law enforcemen­t vessels to patrol in key waters and have released safety alerts to guide navigation.

Lianyungan­g in Jiangsu province, neighborin­g Zhejiang, has also ended its moratorium and started fishing on Monday.

Since the moratorium came into force on May 1, the city has dispatched 324 law enforcemen­t vessels and 138 illegal fishing boats have been seized, according to local authoritie­s.

 ?? LIN LIJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Fishing boats in Taizhou, a coastal city in Zhejiang province, set sail on Monday as the three-month fishing moratorium in the East China Sea was lifted on the same day.
LIN LIJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY Fishing boats in Taizhou, a coastal city in Zhejiang province, set sail on Monday as the three-month fishing moratorium in the East China Sea was lifted on the same day.

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