Until 2028, it will not be possible to fish shrimp in the San Jorge Gulf, Argentina

Published 2022년 12월 27일

Tridge summary

The Federal Fisheries Council has extended a agreement between Chubut and Santa Cruz provinces to prohibit shrimp fishing in the San Jorge Gulf until 2028. The agreement also grants both provinces a social quota of 5,000 tons to be used by vessels. The council believes this interjurisdictional management model has led to increased shrimp catches and productive development, creating job opportunities. However, the extension was not supported by the Province of Buenos Aires, as it believes the social compensation fee should be shared fairly among all provinces and not just the two involved.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The Federal Fisheries Council once again renewed the commitment sealed in Resolution 7/2018 between Chubut and Santa Cruz not to fish for shrimp in the San Jorge Gulf and in compensation grants both provinces a social quota of 5,000 tons to be used by vessels to be nominated The collegiate body stated in the last act that the interjurisdictional management model with the support of the provinces of Chubut and Santa Cruz allowed increasing shrimp catches and optimizing their exploitation, generating a significant impact on employment and productive development, for which is deemed convenient to extend the period originally contemplated, until the end of the annual period 2028 inclusive with the aforementioned compensation. The project that establishes the extension was approved by a majority, with the negative vote of the Province of Buenos Aires, which disagreed that the social compensation fee is exclusive to the two provinces involved and that Bs As is not contemplated in the ...

Would you like more in-depth insights?

Gain access to detailed market analysis tailored to your business needs.
By clicking “Accept Cookies,” I agree to provide cookies for statistical and personalized preference purposes. To learn more about our cookies, please read our Privacy Policy.