Historic Step at the World Trade Organization: Limits on Excessive Fishing Subsidies

The World Trade Organization (WTO) announced that a historic agreement restricting billions of dollars in annual overfishing subsidies has entered into force. This agreement, reached in 2022, officially came into effect on Monday after receiving the necessary majority approval from Brazil, Kenya, Tonga, and Vietnam.

Under the new rules, governments will no longer be able to provide subsidies for overfished stocks or fleets fishing outside their legal jurisdiction in international waters. In addition, developing countries could receive support from a fund during this transition period.

“Fish stocks will have a chance to recover, which will be a huge win for local fishermen who depend on healthy oceans,” said Megan Jungwiwattanaporn of Pew Charitable Trusts.

Approximately $35.4 billion is distributed in fishing subsidies worldwide each year. China, the European Union, the United States, South Korea, and Japan are among the countries providing the most incentives.

According to the WTO, this agreement is the product of more than 20 years of negotiations and will expire if more comprehensive rules are not adopted within four years. Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala recently stated that she is “optimistic” and that the agreement could become permanent.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

US Issues Strong Warning to TikTok: “No Transfer of Ownership Agreement, a Ban is Coming”

Next Story

US Corporations Break Records in Eurobond Issuances

Latest from Blog

Under Armour Warns of Annual Sales Decline

The sportswear brand pointed to economic uncertainty and cautious spending patterns among shoppers in its largest market. Under Armour expects fiscal 2027 revenue to decline slightly from the previous year’s performance. Analysts

Australia Targets Housing Investors With Tax Overhaul

Treasurer Jim Chalmers described the budget as the government’s most ambitious economic plan in decades. The reforms target capital gains tax discounts and negative gearing benefits tied to investment properties. Officials argued

UK Stocks Slide on Political Market Jitters

FTSE 100 fell Tuesday as investors reacted to mounting political uncertainty in the United Kingdom The benchmark index lost 0.4%, while the mid-cap FTSE 250 dropped 1.2%. Prime Minister Keir Starmer rejected

Energy Stocks Face Sharp Correction Risk

Recent trading swings now raise concerns about a potential market reversal across the energy sector. Technical analysts identified a developing head-and-shoulders pattern, often linked to weakening upward trends. The chart formation includes

Delivery Hero CEO Exit Signals Strategic Shift

Delivery Hero announced CEO Niklas Oestberg will leave after a leadership transition process. The company plans to complete the succession by March 31, 2027, according to Tuesday’s statement. Delivery Hero launched a
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Under Armour Warns of Annual Sales Decline

The sportswear brand pointed to economic uncertainty and cautious spending

Australia Targets Housing Investors With Tax Overhaul

Treasurer Jim Chalmers described the budget as the government’s most