Title: INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND AQUACULTURE PRODUCTS
1INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND AQUACULTURE PRODUCTS
- DR. A LEM, FISHERY INDUSTRY OFFICER,
FAO-GLOBEFISH - NACA AQUAMARKETS 2003
- MANILA, 2-6 JUNE 2003
2(No Transcript)
3OUTLINE
- SOME WORDS ON FAO
- GLOBEFISH/INFONETWORK
- INTL. TRADE
- ISSUES THAT AFFECT TRADE
- WTO - FROM URUGUAY TO DOHA (AND CANCUN)
- CONCLUSIONS
4FAO
- ALL ISSUES RELATED TO FISHERIES
- TRADE FISH UTILIZATION AND MARKETING SERVICE
- COFI-SUBCOMMITTEE ON FISH TRADE
- (COFI-SUBCOMMITTEE ON AQUACULTURE)
- INFONETWORK (GLOBEFISH, INFOFISH, INFOPESCA,
INFOPECHE, INFOSAMAK, EUROFISH, INFOYU)
5GLOBEFISH
- PARTNERS
- European Commission,
- NMFS (US),
- FROM (Spain), OFREMER (France), IREPA (Italy),
DENMARK, Norwegian Seafood Export Council,
MOROCCO, Fundación Chile - ASSOCIATE PARTNERS ACADEMIA AND INDUSTRY
6GLOBAL FISH EXPORTS (2001) 56 BILLION
- DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 50 OF EXPORTS
- NET EXPORT REVENUES FROM FISHERIES MOST IMPORTANT
AFTER TIMBER FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES (US 18
billion)
7World exports of fishery commodities in 2001, in
value
8Net exports from commodities
9AQUACULTURE EXPORTS
- PROBLEM OF ANALYSIS
- TRADE STATISTICS DO NOT GIVE ORIGIN ( CAPTURE
OR AQUACULTURE) - ONLY FOR SOME SPECIES IS ORIGIN EVIDENT ( TROUT,
ATLANTIC SALMON, CARP, TILAPIA ) - TRADE A MIX OF FARMED AND CAPTURE PRODUCT
(SHRIMP, PACIFIC SALMON)
10MAJOR FARMED SPECIES FOR EXPORT
- SHRIMP
- SALMON
- BIVALVES
- CARP 1 IN PRODUCTION BUT LIMITED TRADE
11FASTGROWERS
- FARMED SALMON EXPORTS 700,000 MT,
- FARMED TROUT EXPORTS 125,000 MT
- FARMED TILAPIA EXPORTS CA 70,000 MT
- FARMED SEABASS AND SEABREAM EXPORTS CA 100,000 MT
12World Trade of Shrimps, 1976-2001 in MT (live
weight)
Figures in Live weight
Source FAO
13World Trade Flow of Salmons, 1976-2001 in MT
(live weight)
Source FAO
14AMERICAN CATFISH
- 5 IN US FISH CONSUMPTION
- EXPORTS ARE GROWING (Vietnam to US)
- AMERICAN CATFISH INSTITUTE - marketing and
campaigns
15World Trade of Bivalves, 1976-2001 in MT (live
weight)
16BIVALVE TRADE (2001)
- SCALLOP IMPORTS 68,000 MT
- CLAM IMPORTS 145,000 MT
- MUSSEL IMPORTS 180,000 MT
- OYSTER IMPORTS 41,000 MT
17World Trade Flow of Seabass and Seabream,
1976-2001 in MT (live weight)
Source FAO
18World Trade of Tilapia, 1990-2001 in MT (live
weight)
Source FAO
19SEAWEED
- LIMITED TRADE
- FOOD AND NON-FOOD
- EXAMPLE EU-IMPORTS 61,000 MT (2000) FRESHDRIED
20LIVE SEAFOOD
- GROWING DEMAND
- MAINLY ETHNIC MARKETS
- HIGH PRICES
- ASIAN ETHNIC MARKETS IN EUROPE AND US
- ( ORNAMENTAL OR AQUARIUM MARKET)
21NON-FOOD OR ORNAMENTAL
- MOSTLY FRESHWATER AQUACULTURE
- MARINE AQUACULTURE GROWING
- ASIA TO EU, US AND JAPAN
- VERY DEPENDENT ON ECONOMIC CLIMATE
- IMPORTS 2000 US 250 MILLION
- RETAIL US 3 BILLION
22SOME FUTURE TRADE ISSUES
- QUALITY AND FOOD SAFETY
- WTO TRADE AND TARIFFS
- FISHERIES SUBSIDIES
- DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL DEVELOPMENT
- DEMAND TRENDS
- FISH TRADE-FOOD SECURITY
23QUALITY AND FOOD SAFETY
- CODEX STANDARDS FOR AQUACULTURE PRODUCTS
- HACCP AND RISK ASSESSMENT
- ISO 9000 STANDARDS
- LABELLING-CERTIFICATION
- TRACEABILITY AND PRODUCTION METHOD (CONSUMER
INFORMATION) - NEW EU LABELING RULES 2002
- INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
24QALITY AND FOOD SAFETY II
- GMOS
- ENVIRONMENT
- TRANSPARENCY
25TRADE AND TARIFFS
- !!! FISH IS A NON AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT !!!
- TARIFF REDUCTIONS OVER TIME
- NTBs (NON-TARIFF TRADE BARRIERS)
- TARIFF ESCALATION FOR PROCESSED PRODUCTS
- URUGUAY ROUND TRADE NEGOTIATIONS
- NEW ROUND OF TRADE NEGOTIATIONS Doha Development
Agenda
26URUGUAY ROUND AGREEMENTS
- SPS (SANITARY AND PHYTOSANITARY MEASURES)
- TBT (TECHINICAL BARRIERS TO TRADE)
- ANTI-DUMPING
- SUBSIDIES AND COUNTERVAILING MEASURES
- DISPUTE SETTLEMENT (SHRIMP, SALMON, TUNA,
SARDINES)
27DOHA Development Agenda
- TRADE LIBERALISATION
- FISHMARKET ACCESS FOR NON-AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
- PROPOSAL ELIMINATE ALL DUTIES ON FISH AND FISH
PRODUCTS - FISHERIES SUBSIDIES PROPOSALS FOR GREEN/RED
BOXES - ECOLABELING
28GLOBALISATION
- INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
- COUNTRY MEMBERSHIP (WTO, CODEX, REGIONAL
FISHERIES COMMISSIONS) - CHINA IN WTO, RUSSIA IN 2004 ?
- COUNTRY MEMBERSHIP IN TRADE AREAS (ASEAN, EU,
NAFTA, MERCOSUR) - CONVERGENCE OF POLICY
- GLOBAL SOURCING-THIRD COUNTRY PROCESSING
- GLOBAL TRENDS IN DEMAND
29DISTRIBUTION
- CONCENTRATION OF DEMAND
- INCREASING POWER OF SUPERMARKETS AND HYPERMARKETS
- CUSTOMER TRUST IN SUPERMARKETS !
- GREAT POTENTIAL FOR AQUACULTURE PRODUCTS IN
MODERN DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS - PLANNED PRODUCTION AND DELIVERY
- STANDARD QUALITY
- CONTRACT PRICES
30DEMAND TRENDS
- FAO PROJECTIONS 2010/2030/2050
- 2050 270 MILLION TONS
- SUPPLY GAP
- MORE FRESH FISH
- MORE LIVE FISH
- MORE VALUE-ADDED
- ORGANIC PRODUCTS
31FOOD SECURITY
- AQUACULTURE IMPORTANT FOR DOMESTIC CONSUMPTION
- AQUACULTURE EXPORTS CREATE FOREIGN CURRENCY
REVENUES - FISH TRADE-FOOD SECURITY
32CONCLUSIONS
- AQUACULTURE TRADE GOVERNED BY INTERNATIONAL
AGREEMENTS (WTO) - TRADE IN AQUACULTURE PRODUCTS GROWING, IN
ABSOLUTE AND RELATIVE TERMS - BETTER STATISTICS NEEDED
- FUTURE RISE IN DEMAND MUST BE MET BY AQUACULTURE
SUPPLIES
33THANK YOU !