Debate 2.0: Will you eat the last bluefin tuna?

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Im Jahr 2012 wird der letzte Blauflossen-Thunfisch in die Netze der Hochseetrawler gehen und auf den Tellern edler Sushi-Restaurants landen. Mark Notoras - Redakteur des United Nations University Media Studio und Forscher der United Nations University for Sustainability and Peace - hat sich seine eigenen Gedanken zum "Verschwinden" des Blauflossenthuns gemacht und stellt die Frage: Wirst Du den letzten Blauflossenthunfisch essen?

Autor*in Rima Hanano, 26.08.10

It is now well known that stocks of the famed Northern bluefin tuna — known as kuro maguro or hon maguro in Japanese — are on the brink of collapse.

Still, this beast of the sea’s soft buttery flesh is delicious. The most prized cut, otoro, is from the fish’s fatty belly and is the jewel in the crown of the sashimi dining experience.

Paul Greenberg is author of Four Fish,  a book about the dominance of a few fish species across the globe. He, like many of us has succumbed to the tuna temptation against his better judgement.

The problem that he and others assert is that tuna is not whale. That is, overwhelmingly across the globe it is as culturally acceptable to eat bluefin tuna as it is culturally unacceptable to eat whale.

So what to do? Do we forgo one of life’s little pleasures in the name of the common good? And if we do, will that even make a difference?

The new fish stories can be read as parables about technology. What was, once upon a time, a stable relationship between predator and prey was transformed by new ‚machinery‘ into a deadly mismatch. This reading isn’t so much wrong as misleading. To paraphrase the old N.R.A. favorite, FADs don’t kill fish, people do. — Elizabeth Kolbert, The New Yorker magazine

At present, the reality is that if we don’t eat the bluefin, some eager sushi diner anywhere on the globe will eat it anyway. Most likely, they will be from Japan, a country responsible for a huge 70-80% of global consumption. Even if the World Wildlife Fund for Nature succeeds in its newly-launched campaign to encourage Japanese consumers to join the fight to save the bluefin tuna, won’t it probably end up in the greedy hands of some mega-corporation anyway?

“Perhaps we will never come to feel about tuna the way we have come to feel about whales, but it is to this example we must look if we are to fix our tuna problem once and for all,” Greenberg laments.

On this week’s Debate 2.0 we ask, can humanity rescue the bluefin tuna? Would you be willing to give up eating it? Furthermore, would you encourage others to give it up also? If so, how?

Published under CC, by Mark Notaras

The Tragedy of the Commons

Warum überfischen wir die Ozeane, roden die Wälder dieser Erde und stoßen so viel C02 in die Atmosphäre, dass sich die Lebensqualität auf der Erde derart verschlechtert? Fragen, die der Biologe und Ökologe Garrett James Hardin bereits Ende der 60´er Jahre in seinem Essay „The Tragedy of the Commons“ zu beantworten versuchte.