Thursday 23 August 2012

FILIPINO CONCERN ON MINING AND TUNA

Please read the report on PNG Attitude expressing concern on the Deep Sea Mining in the Magadus Square. Please click:

Philippines tuna firms to open cannery in PNG

The report below may have added extra knowledge to the migratory path of the tuna.

It traces the path from Atlantic and Indian Oceans to the Pacific. Is the report referring to the yellow fin tuna?

Surely Mr Espejo is not seeking to show that the tuna breeding grounds are in the Sulu Sea in the South West Philippines and not in the Magadus Square of Papua New Guinea. Please click:

MAGADUS SQUARE TUNA BREEDING

Philippines tuna firms to open cannery in PNG

EDWIN ESPEJO | Hybrid News Ltd

Edwin EspejoTWO PHILIPPINE TUNA COMPANIES have hooked up with Thailand’s Thai Union Corporation to establish Majestic Seafood in Papua New Guinea which will open in two months.
 
The $37.6 million, 200-metric ton capacity canning plant, PNG’s largest, will bring to eight the number canneries in tuna-rich PNG.

Thai Union is the world’s second largest tuna canner and Thailand is also the world’s largest canned tuna producer.

PNG recently said it had overtaken the Philippines as the world’s second biggest producer of canned tuna. Majestic Seafoods will bring the total daily canned tuna production in PNG to more than 1,200 metric tons.

The Philippines produces an average of 750 metric tons of canned tuna a day.

Filipino tuna fishing companies began to establish operations in PNG in the late 1990s following declining tuna catches in Philippine waters. The first tuna canning plant opened in 1997.

At the turn of the century, PNG began restricting tuna fishing within its territorial waters. Today, it only allows access to its fishing grounds if foreign companies set up canning and processing plants.

PNG lies in the middle of the tuna migratory path that stretches from the Atlantic and Indian oceans and ends up in the Sulu Sea southwest of the Philippines.

Meanwhile, the Deep Sea Mining Campaign says PNG’s fishing industry could be jeopardised by mining for gold and copper in the Bismarck Sea.

The world’s first deep sea mining project, Nautilus Minerals’ Solwara 1, is poised to begin but is facing mounting opposition in coastal communities.

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