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International-UN-NGOs
UN Temporarily Halts Caviar Exports; UN, A-List Reeling
2006-01-04
A U.N. panel ordered a temporary halt to caviar exports by the world's major producers Tuesday, buying time for experts to find ways to reverse dwindling populations of threatened sturgeon — whose eggs provide the culinary delicacy.

Many sturgeon species are suffering "serious population declines," said the U.N. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, or CITES.

Information from sturgeon-exporting countries bordering the Caspian and Black seas, as well as the lower Danube and Heilongjiang-Amur rivers on the Chinese-Russian border indicates stocks are falling rapidly, CITES said.

Major caviar exporters include Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and Iran, which are all on the Caspian Sea; Bulgaria and Romania, which border the Black Sea along with Russia. China is also a caviar exporter.

The ban covers exports from the major sturgeon-exporting countries, said CITES, which regulates legal caviar exports through an international system of permits.

The Caspian Sea produces the sturgeons said to be the world's highest quality. The countries bordering the Caspian Sea account for 80 percent of the global caviar trade.

The U.N. body said the restrictions on world caviar trade were temporary to permit exporting nations to show they are not driving the species to extinction and are taking steps to preserve the source of the delicacy.

Countries wishing to export sturgeon products "must demonstrate that their proposed catch and export quotas reflect current population trends and are sustainable," said Willem Wijnstekers, secretary-general of CITES.

"Governments need to fully implement the measures that they have agreed to ensure that the exploitation of sturgeon stocks is commercially and environmentally sustainable over the long term," Wijnstekers added.

CITES said it "remains hopeful" the exporting countries will take the measues may allow international trade to resume.
...more...

Hey, I know an important story when I see one.
Posted by:.com

#8  Besoeker, That was apparently the source of caviar before sturgeon. It got so bad that the fish got almost extinct and replaced by sturgeon as a source of caviar. Coelacanth was believed to be extinct for some 120 million years, but recently found to be quite alive and though not in great numbers, with little care, it may be coelacanth's turn to find its way to our tables, giving sturgeon a break.
Posted by: Münchhausen   2006-01-04 16:29  

#7  I imagine Soviet era rivers that could actually burn that drained into the Caspian probably did wonders for the ecology there.

I'm sure they'll find a way to blame Bush though.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2006-01-04 14:39  

#6  #5 I remember reading some years ago that in order to protect the Caviar industry, they were no longer using Sturgeon roe, but another fish. (Name escapes me at the moment, "Blackfish" or something like that) Mind you this was 20 or so years ago.
Posted by: Redneck Jim 2006-01-04 08:45



Believe it was Coelacanth Jim. Very rare.
Posted by: Besoeker   2006-01-04 09:03  

#5  I remember reading some years ago that in order to protect the Caviar industry, they were no longer using Sturgeon roe, but another fish. (Name escapes me at the moment, "Blackfish" or something like that) Mind you this was 20 or so years ago.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2006-01-04 08:45  

#4  lol, bad! Except that I feel bad for laughing at that one, because it's so serious. When are we gonna get for real about the UN? Wonder what Bolton had to say about this one!
Posted by: BA   2006-01-04 08:43  

#3  Look soon for the Prepubescent Hookers for Caviar Program...run by Kojo.
Posted by: tu3031   2006-01-04 08:43  

#2  next on Oprah:
UN Darfur Talks on Hold: Napkin Ring Shortage
Posted by: badanov   2006-01-04 05:52  

#1  In one life's small mysteries. I have wondered why Canada doesn't have a caviar trade. They have sturgeon in their northern rivers. I know because I saw one in the Winisk river (which flows into Hudson's bay), big sucker too. Must have been 6 feet long.
Posted by: phil_b   2006-01-04 05:46  

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