Yahoo – AFP,
Dennis Chong, 10 Aug 2015
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Hong Kong
is the second-largest consumer of seafood per capita in Asia -- an
average
resident consumes 71.2 kilos (157 pounds) of seafood each year
(AFP Photo/Isaac
Lawrence)
|
Hong Kong
(AFP) - A seafood lunch in Hong Kong is enjoyed by locals and visitors alike,
but with threatened species on the menu and fishing practices that endanger
marine life, campaigners want to change the city's appetite.
Hong Kong
is the second-largest consumer of seafood per capita in Asia -- an average
resident consumes 71.2 kilos (157 pounds) of seafood each year, more than four
times the global average, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature Hong
Kong.
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Seafood is
ubiquitous in Hong Kong, where
customers often choose their fish live from
a
tank (AFP Photo/Isaac Lawrence)
|
Whether in
high-end restaurants or waterside eateries, seafood is ubiquitous in the
southern Chinese city, where customers often choose their fish live from a
tank.
Baked
lobster with noodles in cheese and deep-fried prawns in salted egg yolk are
among local favourites.
But a
"fish tank index" compiled by WWF Hong Kong found that more than 50
percent of the species available in the city's traditional restaurant tanks
were from "highly unsustainable" sources.
"Overfishing
is driving the collapse of the world's ocean fish stocks and edging many types
of fish towards extinction, yet they are still on our menus," WWF Hong
Kong conservation director Gavin Edwards told AFP.
"Hong
Kong has a special responsibility to turn the tide as one of the biggest
consumers of seafood."
Unsustainable
fish include those caught by controversial fishing practices, such as using
cyanide poison, or from overfishing already depleted species.
Popular,
threatened seafood in Hong Kong include grouper, wild sea cucumber and humphead
wrasse -- a coral reef fish.
Lack of
information
The WWF has
launched a new online seafood guide for Hong Kong detailing which types are
deemed unsustainable.
![]() |
Popular,
threatened seafood in Hong Kong
include grouper, wild sea cucumber and
humphead
wrasse -- a coral reef fish
(AFP Photo/Isaac Lawrence)
|
But there
is still a way to go to change consumer habits.
Visiting
Hong Kong for a post-graduation trip, Japanese student Ted Machizawa, 22, has
just finished lunch in the coastal town of Sai Kung, famous for its seafood.
He says he
had no idea whether his meal -- steamed grouper and shrimps -- could pose a
threat to the ocean.
"We're
just trying to see what it's like here. We are probably not too keen on knowing
what kind of fish it is," he said, sitting metres away from tanks packed
with live crabs and reef fish.
Hong Konger
Janice Fung said restaurants rarely gave information on sourcing.
"If
you go to an expensive restaurant or a specialised seafood shop they might tell
you. Otherwise the information is not comprehensive," she said as she
waited for a meal at Cafe Deco on the city's famous Peak, which serves a wide
range of seafood.
"If you
tell me what I am eating is not sustainable I will try to avoid it," she
added.
Cafe Deco
has opted to provide an alternative sustainable menu as part of the WWF push --
shunning the controversial delicacy shark fin, for example.
"You
can't necessarily tell the difference (in flavour)... if you don't use shark
fin to make dumplings," senior chef William Chang told AFP as he put the
finishing touches to ocean trout-stuffed ravioli, a dish on the sustainable
menu.
Chang says
restaurants should "take the first step" to change people's eating
habits.
Some
suppliers are also trying to help.
Banker-turned-fish
farmer Mark Kwok hopes that by farming groupers, which are on the decline in
the ocean, he can help stem the crisis.
His farm in
the northern hillside town of Yuen Long was accredited as sustainable by the
WWF in 2013.
"We
have about 35,000 fish. Even if you were to eat all of them, it wouldn't make a
dent in the ecosystem because these are farmed fish that have never seen the
ocean," he told AFP.
Environmentalists
in the Philippines say stocks of grouper are dwindling near the island of
Palawan, a major source for Hong Kong.
"We
have fishermen who say they used to catch them near the coast. But now, they
have to go further out to sea," said Melo Ponce De Leon, spokeswoman of
the government's Palawan Council for Sustainable Development.
Fear of
change
![]() |
Baked
lobster with noodles in cheese and
deep-fried prawns in salted egg yolk are
among local seafood favourites (AFP
Photo/Isaac Lawrence)
|
"Many
of our customers are from mainland China and they want to get something they
have never seen before," says Ng Wai-lun, one of the owners of Chuen Kee
Seafood Restaurant on Sai Kung's promenade.
"They
like to pick the colourful ones... or something caught fresh from the
wild," said Ng, pointing out a tank of humphead wrasse and groupers.
Ng says he
would have to scrap 70 percent of the menu to make it ocean-friendly, something
he fears would drive customers away.
But
campaigners say progress has been made.
"We
found in a recent survey that 80 percent of customers would not buy
unsustainable seafood if they knew it was unsustainable," says Edwards.
"There
is more awareness, but we still have much further to go."





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