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The conclusions of the EU Council on climate resilience are not staying on paper: they are strongly confirmed by data and real-world cases. A recent Planet Tracker report, supported by scientific evidence referenced by the IPCC, shows how climate change is already becoming a financial risk for fisheries, aquaculture and seafood processing. Climate change is no longer only an environmental issue; it is increasingly a concrete economic and financial challenge for the global seafood industry, as demonstrated by data, case studies and scenario-based projections.
According to Planet Tracker, under a high-emissions scenario, climate change could cost the global fisheries sector up to $15 billion by 2050—a figure the authors describe as conservative, built on IPCC data and representing the lower end of a potentially larger impact. Extreme weather is already causing lost fishing days, damaged gear and operational disruptions, while slower structural pressures—ocean warming, deoxygenation, acidification and sea level rise—are reshaping marine ecosystems in ways that reinforce one another. The report also highlights how shifts in species distribution are affecting seafood prices: reduced catches and quota revisions translate into rising costs absorbed by companies, with ripple effects across processing, distribution and consumption. Even under low-emissions scenarios, more than half of transboundary stocks could move from exclusive economic zones to the high seas by 2050.
Planet Tracker’s estimate may still understate the real exposure. Gorjan Nikolik (Rabobank) argues that for an industry generating over $500 billion in annual value, a $15 billion loss seems relatively limited; other analyses, including from the University of Cambridge, point to annual losses between $17 and $41 billion. The report’s examples underline that value is already being lost: declining cod and flounder stocks in warming waters, the Baltic Sea crisis linked to deoxygenation, and rising costs for oyster production in the north-western Pacific driven by acidification. Aquaculture is also impacted as warmer waters increase stress, support the spread of parasites and disease, and make mass mortality events more frequent. Climate variability such as El Niño is already affecting fishmeal and fish oil production in key regions like Peru, driving up feed costs and putting pressure on the entire value chain.
The report asks a decisive question: financially, is it better to maintain the status quo or invest now in adaptation? Planet Tracker’s answer is clear—long-term resilience does not come from delaying decisions, but from building adaptive capacity today. Climate change is turning physical risks into financial risks: ports, facilities, concessions and business models built on outdated environmental conditions may lose value. For the seafood sector, the message is direct: adaptation is not optional—it is a requirement for the economic stability of the value chain in the decades ahead.
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L’articolo Climate Resilience: Why EU Conclusions Matter for the Seafood Industry proviene da Pesceinrete.
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