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[https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/02/climate/nations-will-start-talks-to-protect-fish-of-the-high-seas.html '''''Nations will start talks to protect fish of the high seas''''']
[https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/02/climate/nations-will-start-talks-to-protect-fish-of-the-high-seas.html '''''Nations will start talks to protect fish of the high seas''''']




'''''Global Fishing Watch / Beta 2.0''''' -- http://globalfishingwatch.org/map/
'''''Global Fishing Watch / Beta 2.0''''' -- http://globalfishingwatch.org/map/


'''''Tracking Illegal Fishing''''' ''(2015)'' -- https://environment.google/projects/fishing-watch/  
'''''Tracking Illegal Fishing''''' ''(2015)'' -- https://environment.google/projects/fishing-watch/  




''The oceans are big — 1.4 billion square miles big, or about 71% of the earth’s surface, less than 5% of which has even been explored. Hundreds of millions of people depend on the oceans for their livelihood; more than a billion rely on fish as their primary source of nutrition. But today, threatened by illegal fishing, overfishing, and habitat destruction, the global fish population is in crisis; some species’ numbers have dropped by a staggering 90%. What’s worse, until very recently, the sheer vastness of the oceans meant that nobody could even measure much of this damaging activity, let alone do anything about it.''
''The oceans — 1.4 billion square miles, or about 71% of the earth’s surface, less than 5% of which has even been explored. Hundreds of millions of people depend on the oceans for their livelihood; more than a billion rely on fish as their primary source of nutrition. But today, threatened by illegal fishing, overfishing, and habitat destruction, the global fish population is in crisis; some species’ numbers have dropped by a staggering 90%. What’s worse, until very recently, the sheer vastness of the oceans meant that nobody could even measure much of this damaging activity, let alone do anything about it.''




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● http://globalfishingwatch.org/
https://www.greenpolicy360.net/w/Global_Fishing_Watch


● http://blog.globalfishingwatch.org/


http://oceana.org/global-fishing-watch
* http://globalfishingwatch.org/


http://skytruth.org/mapping-global-fishing/
* http://blog.globalfishingwatch.org/


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fn2JXmCUo30
* http://oceana.org/global-fishing-watch
 
* http://skytruth.org/mapping-global-fishing/
 
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fn2JXmCUo30





Revision as of 22:03, 15 August 2018

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Updates: (2017)


Nations will start talks to protect fish of the high seas


Global Fishing Watch / Beta 2.0 -- http://globalfishingwatch.org/map/

Tracking Illegal Fishing (2015) -- https://environment.google/projects/fishing-watch/


The oceans — 1.4 billion square miles, or about 71% of the earth’s surface, less than 5% of which has even been explored. Hundreds of millions of people depend on the oceans for their livelihood; more than a billion rely on fish as their primary source of nutrition. But today, threatened by illegal fishing, overfishing, and habitat destruction, the global fish population is in crisis; some species’ numbers have dropped by a staggering 90%. What’s worse, until very recently, the sheer vastness of the oceans meant that nobody could even measure much of this damaging activity, let alone do anything about it.


Global Fishing Watch


https://www.greenpolicy360.net/w/Global_Fishing_Watch



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current12:42, 17 November 2014Thumbnail for version as of 12:42, 17 November 2014577 × 820 (302 KB)Siterunner (talk | contribs)Global Fishing Watch http://globalfishingwatch.org/ Category:Green Graphics