Fishing Industry

Introduction

There are various ways that ships and boast in general harm the environment including bilge waste, people dumping plastic and sewage overboard, fuel leakage, fuel emissions, and transporting invasive species on their hulls. In this section we will explore these issues, as well as the Fishing Industry specific forms of pollution including cyanide, ghost gear, and bycatch.

Fuel Emissions

Carbon

Small Particle Pollution

Ghost Gear
&
Ghost Fishing

"Ghost fishing gear is the deadliest form of marine plastic as it unselectively catches wildlife, entangling marine mammals, seabirds, sea turtles, and sharks, subjecting them to a slow and painful death through exhaustion and suffocation. Ghost fishing gear also damages critical marine habitats such as coral reefs. Additionally, it’s responsible for the loss of commercially valuable fish stocks, undermining both the overall sustainability of fisheries as well as the people who depend on fish for food and livelihoods."

"Scientists with The Nature Conservancy and the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), along with the Pelagic Research Group and Hawaii Pacific University, released a new peer-reviewed study that provides the first global estimate of plastic pollution from industrial fisheries. The study reveals that more than 100 million pounds of plastic pollution enters the ocean each year from lost fishing gear—providing the baseline information needed to improve understanding of the problem and drive reforms to mitigate the flow of fisheries’ plastic pollution."

"The subtropical oceanic gyre in the North Pacific Ocean is currently covered with tens of thousands of tonnes of floating plastic debris, dispersed over millions of square kilometres. A large fraction is composed of fishing nets and ropes while the rest is mostly composed of hard plastic objects and fragments, sometimes carrying evidence on their origin. In 2019, an oceanographic mission conducted in the area, retrieved over 6000 hard plastic debris items > 5 cm. The debris was later sorted, counted, weighed, and analysed for evidence of origin and age. Our results, complemented with numerical model simulations and findings from a previous oceanographic mission, revealed that a majority of the floating material stems from fishing activities."

Products Made From Ghost Gear

Bilge Waste

What is Bilge Water? Learn How Ships Store & Treat Waste Water in Bilge Wells

"Oily bilge waste water is the byproduct of operating ocean-going vessels and, according to the Environmental Protection Agency, contains contaminants such as lubricants, grease, and cleaning fluids, as well as harmful or toxic metals such as arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead, and selenium, some of which are known or probable carcinogens. Other harmful substances in bilge can include organic chemicals such as benzene, chloroform, hexachlorocyclohexane isomers, and naphthalene

The size of tankers and container vessels that dump their waste can help us understand the amount of pollution they are emitting. Commercial marine vessels are some of the largest machines in the world, with some measuring 131 meters (143 yards) in length; comparable to the size of a small skyscraper. The engines in these vessels can be as large as three buses and have up to 333 times more horsepower than the engine of a midsize car. Their large size makes cargo vessels very efficient for transporting goods; but if the waste from these massive engines routinely ends up in the oceans, their environmental impact can be substantial. Even two decades ago, researchers reported that ocean-going vessels generated millions of tons of waste annually. A 2003 report by the nonprofit conservation group Oceana estimated that in European waters alone “illegal dumping and routine operations of vessels account for between 666,000 and over 2.5 million tons of hydrocarbons of marine pollution per year.” That amount is up to 70 times greater than the Exxon Valdez oil spill and is likely even greater today. Over a 20 year span from 1992 to 2012, the amount of ocean-going traffic has grown by 300%, increasing the likelihood of even more vessel pollution. 

A large research collaboration published by The National Academies Press (2003) found that between 1990 and 1999 vessels (in contrast to pipelines or facilities) in US waters produced the largest oil spills. Additionally, this research reports that 12 percent of the total petroleum hydrocarbons found worldwide in the oceans were from “accidental spills and operational discharges of cargo oil occurring during transportation of petroleum products.” This accounted for 160,000 tonnes of oil annually; the equivalent of four Exxon Valdez oil spills every year." - https://skytruth.org/2020/03/bilge-dumping-at-sea-why-should-i-care/  

Bilge Care & Preventing Spills

Click the link to the above to learn more about how to prevent this type of pollution if you own or work on a boat or ship of any kind. The link here gives suggestions for marina operators and boaters alike.

We also have some information on our Civic Activism page about places you can turn for guidance on whistleblowing and other ways of holding companies accountable.

Plastic & Trash

Plastic and other types of trash such as cigarettes are often thrown overboard instead of paying for proper disposal.

Further Reading

Click the Commercial Fishing button and/or the Food Security button to learn about the other effects fishing has on the environment and people.

Ways to Help

Click the Seafood Alternatives button for ideas on how to enjoy seafood flavors without the ecological or humanitarian impact of the fishing industry.

If you want to help clean up harm done by fishing and other human activities, consider the following resources:

Mangroves