Gambia, 11 Others Barred from Exporting Seafood to US from January

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Gambia, 11 Others Barred from Exporting Seafood to US from January
Gambia, 11 Others Barred from Exporting Seafood to US from January

Africa-Press – Gambia. The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has announced it will impose seafood import bans on 46 countries with fisheries laws that fail to meet US standards for avoiding by-catch of marine mammals.

In a list of affected countries announced Friday, NOAA Fisheries said fishing vessels from roughly half of the world’s seafood-exporting nations are not meeting “compatibility standards” with US law for avoiding the unintentional catch of whales, dolphins and other marine mammals. Those countries “now face stringent import restrictions, ensuring that seafood entering US markets adhere to the same high standards as American-caught seafood,” the agency said in a release.

Beginning in January, 12 nations will be fully barred from importing seafood to US markets. They are: The Gambia, Benin, Grenada, Guinea, Haiti, Iran, Namibia, New Caledonia, Russia, Saint Lucia, Togo and Venezuela. Another 34 nations — including major exporters like Brazil, Chile, China, Indonesia, Mexico, the Philippines and Vietnam — will see some of their seafood products banned from US markets.

Eugenio Piñeiro Soler, NOAA’s assistant administrator for fisheries, called the action a “major win” for American fishermen, consumers and marine ecosystems. “By enforcing these standards, we are protecting our domestic seafood industry and ensuring only safe, sustainable seafood reaches American tables,” he said in a press release.

The Standard could not reach the Ministry of Fisheries of the Gambia for an immediate reaction to the US decision.

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