PMID: 16521840Mar 9, 2006Paper

Fueling global fishing fleets

Ambio
Peter H TyedmersDaniel Pauly

Abstract

Over the course of the 20th century, fossil fuels became the dominant energy input to most of the world's fisheries. Although various analyses have quantified fuel inputs to individual fisheries, to date, no attempt has been made to quantify the global scale and to map the distribution of fuel consumed by fisheries. By integrating data representing more than 250 fisheries from around the world with spatially resolved catch statistics for 2000, we calculate that globally, fisheries burned almost 50 billion L of fuel in the process of landing just over 80 million t of marine fish and invertebrates for an average rate of 620 L t(-1). Consequently, fisheries account for about 1.2% of global oil consumption, an amount equivalent to that burned by the Netherlands, the 18th-ranked oil consuming country globally, and directly emit more than 130 million t of CO2 into the atmosphere. From an efficiency perspective, the energy content of the fuel burned by global fisheries is 12.5 times greater than the edible-protein energy content of the resulting catch.

Citations

Sep 1, 2014·Marine Pollution Bulletin·Dagoberto PortJoão Thadeu de Menezes
Jul 22, 2008·Conservation Biology : the Journal of the Society for Conservation Biology·Jennifer Jacquet, Daniel Pauly
Jul 22, 2014·Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences·Simon JenningsDavid C Smith
Apr 14, 2016·Marine Pollution Bulletin·Dagoberto PortJoão Thadeu de Menezes
Feb 13, 2015·Scientific Reports·U Rashid SumailaDaniel Pauly
Oct 29, 2017·Ambio·Max TroellAnne-Sophie Crépin
Dec 6, 2017·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·Paul BehrensArnold Tukker
Aug 24, 2017·Global Change Biology·Richard S CottrellJulia L Blanchard
Aug 18, 2010·Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences·Serge M Garcia, Andrew A Rosenberg
May 29, 2008·Environmental Management·Nathan Pelletier, Peter Tyedmers

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