Opinion: News stories on and around January 9 with headlines along the lines of: 'Shark finning gets total NZ ban' has lead many people to believe we have won the battle against this barbaric practice. If you are one of those that read beyond the headlines you will know that this is in fact not true. The government were compelled to respond to more than 45,000 submissions opposing the previous shark fin plan, but the response was as muddy as New Zealand's "clean green" image, and a heavy blow to ocean ecosystems.
The New Zealand government has opted for phasing out shark finning over a lengthy period of nearly three years, with blue sharks, the most vulnerable of all the species, only being protected from October 2016. By then it may be too late for the blues.
Famous shark diver and conservationist, Hawaiian born Ocean Ramsey, will be arriving in New Zealand on February 8 and working alongside New Zealand shark scientist Riley Elliott on a two-week mission to drum up support for sharks.
New Zealand is averaging around 24,000 tonnes of shark fins exported to Hong Kong annually, and is one of the biggest exporters of shark fins globally. Riley Elliott is doing a PHD on his research of blue sharks, and is fast proving his hypothesis that New Zealand is a breeding and birthing ground for the blues. A few weeks ago, during a trip to Great Barrier Island, he spotted 10 new born blue sharks, all still with their umbilical scars and skin folds from being in the womb. That same day he and his team also spotted and tagged a 2.5 metre female still with placenta attached to her and recent mating scars.
Sadly this area north east of New Zealand is also the epicentre for shark finning, with hundreds of thousands of blue sharks killed every year. Says Riley, "All eight mature sharks I tagged last year transmitted daily whilst in the protected waters of our Pacific neighbours. Upon their migratory return to New Zealand waters they stopped transmitting, the timing and area of which coincides with the peak tuna fishing season. It is likely they were caught and finned. This is not only a tragedy, but it also means that $30 000 worth of hard-earned research money has been shredded into a bowl of soup."