Issues as to fishing industry subsidies, deemed as contributing to overfishing and whose estimated value amounts to USD 35 billion by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), are to be one of the key issues that will be debated at next month’s Ocean Conference in New York. “If you consider that the total export of fish and seafood products is USD 146 billion, we are talking about that of each USD 5 in fish products, USD 1 is subsidized, David Vivas, a Legal Affairs Officer in UNCTAD’s Trade, Environment, Climate Change and Sustainable Development Branch pointed out. “So it’s not a small amount. People are paying very expensively for a fish. They pay it by the dish and with their taxes, continued Vivas, In his view, this financial motivation creates “a race to the bottom as fleets compete against each other to harvest increasing amounts of fish – at a time when seafood is already a scarce resource. The officer also stressed that the subsidies create incentives to deplete resources faster than if there weren’t the subsidies. According to UNCTAD, the international community is harvesting fish at unsustainable biological levels. The Mediterranean Sea is about 70 per cent exploited and the Black Sea 90 per cent. Besides, the entity has stated that roughly 56 per cent of all fish products come from wild harvest, with the remaining amount farmed, according to figures cited by the UN. “The demand remains quite strong, mainly from the Asian region. Hence countries are not only going to NY to consider, issuing a political signal, commented Lucas Assunçao, who heads UNCTAD’s Trade, Environment, Climate Change and Sustainable Development Branch, in reference to The Ocean Conference, “they are very concerned about this considerable market. Assunçao said that the topic of fishery subsidies is “very contentious and involves requesting countries to provide information on what subsidies they provide and prohibiting those that contribute to overfishing, as well as potentially giving differential treatment to developing countries. UNCTAD is working towards a multilateral fisheries agreement that will be discussed at The Ocean Conference in New York in early June, and finalized at the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Ministerial Conference in Buenos Aires this December. The idea of such an agreement has support from a number of countries and regional blocs, including the African, Caribbean, and Pacific Group (ACP), the European Union, and Pakistan. In addition to fishery subsidies, the UN trade agency is focusing in illegal, unregulated and unreported (IUU) fishing, and access to markets. “Not all countries participate equally, Assunçao said of the nearly USD 150 billion market for fish and marine products. “[The oceans are] a global common good that is not benefitting all countries that have coasts in equitable ways, he added. Some Governments have said that they will use The Ocean Conference as an opportunity to seek access to bigger markets. The issue is of particular concern for Pacific and Caribbean island states where processing and transporting goods is often more expensive. The main areas of work at the Ocean Conference will be a political call to action, a segment on partnership dialogues and voluntary commitments.