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DA TO IMPORT 25,000 MT OF PELAGIC FISH

Agriculture Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel, Jr. has approved the importation of 25,000 metric tons of pelagic fish species in the last quarter of 2024, which must arrive in the country before January 15 next year.

The importation is in anticipation of reduced fish supply due to the implementation of the three-month closed fishing season that starts November 1 in waters northeast of Palawan and from November 15 in the Visayan Seas and Zamboanga Peninsula. All three areas are spawning grounds for small pelagic fishes like sardines and mackerel. 

Tiu Laurel said 80 percent of the import volume will be allocated for registered importers who belong to the commercial fishing sector while the balance will go to fisheries associations and cooperatives. 

A minimum import volume of 112 metric tons, equivalent to four containers, will be allocated to commercial importers while the MIV for fisheries associations and cooperatives will be 56 metric tons, or two containers. Additional import volume will be determined based on an importer’s percentage share of fish landings in the last three years prior to the importation.

The agriculture chief said importers could apply for sanitary and phytosanitary permits any time after the effectivity of the DA’s order to import fish but will only be valid between September 1 and November 30.

“Frozen pelagic fish species could only be released to the market from October 1, while the last batch of imported fish must arrive no later than January 15, 2025.”

The agriculture head said, however, that frozen pelagic fish species could only be released to the market from October 1, while the last batch of imported fish must arrive no later than January 15, 2025.

Fish imported under a certificate of necessity to import must be reported to and consolidated by the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, he said.

“BFAR shall encourage importers to immediately trade imported fish to ensure that it doesn’t overlap with local catch by the end of the closed fishing season.”

“BFAR shall encourage importers to immediately trade imported fish to ensure that it doesn’t overlap with local catch by the end of the closed fishing season,” Tiu Laurel said in his order signed on April 23.

Import allocation are non-transferrable and only importers who don’t have pending food safety cases, who are able to submit Bureau of Customs accreditation or clearance, who have participated in the last three importation activities under the Fisheries Administrative Order 259, and those who have efficiently used their allocation will be allowed to join the latest liberalized importation. 

Importers could source out the fish supply from respectable sources and they should not come from illegal, unreported and unregulated, or IUU, fishing.

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