Environment

Chile battles to save beloved hake

Poaching and years of regulations favoring industrial trawlers are driving the population of 'merluza' to near-collapse in Chilean waters.

Chilean fishing boats are returning empty-handed after long hours at sea. 'Before, everything was full,' laments hake fisherman Rodrigo Gallardo. Despite nationwide ocean protection efforts, Chile's once-abundant hake, a staple fish, is dwindling rapidly. [Franco Fafasuli, Guillermo Salgado/AFPTV/AFP]

By AFP |

Before setting sail for the South Pacific, Chilean fisherman Rodrigo Gallardo blesses himself to invoke heavenly protection and luck in his pursuit of an increasingly elusive catch: hake.

Strong winds make for a choppy seven-nautical-mile (13km) voyage from the port of Valparaiso to deep waters that decades ago were teeming with Chile's favorite fish.

But several hours later, when Gallardo reels in a longline studded with sardines, which are used as bait, just a single hake has bitten.

"In the past, the hold was completely full," the 46-year-old lamented.

Chilean artisanal fisherman Rodrigo Gallardo shows a hake fished on a boat near Caleta Portales, in Valparaiso, Chile. The South Pacific hake (Merluccius gayi) is the livelihood of about 4,000 small-scale fishermen in Chile, a country with more than 6,000km of coastline and the 10th-largest fishing power. However, Chile's hake population has declined by 70% in two decades. [Rodrigo Arangua/AFP]
Chilean artisanal fisherman Rodrigo Gallardo shows a hake fished on a boat near Caleta Portales, in Valparaiso, Chile. The South Pacific hake (Merluccius gayi) is the livelihood of about 4,000 small-scale fishermen in Chile, a country with more than 6,000km of coastline and the 10th-largest fishing power. However, Chile's hake population has declined by 70% in two decades. [Rodrigo Arangua/AFP]
A woman arranges hake fish and displays them at Caleta Portales, in Valparaiso, Chile. [Rodrigo Arangua/AFP]
A woman arranges hake fish and displays them at Caleta Portales, in Valparaiso, Chile. [Rodrigo Arangua/AFP]

The South Pacific hake, or Merluccius gayi, provides a living for some 4,000 small-scale fishermen in Chile, a country with over 6,000km of coastline and a voracious appetite for "merluza."

But the attraction for cod's more affordable cousin is proving fatal.

Along central Chile's traditional fishing heartland, a growing number of boats return to port with empty holds, as decades of overfishing push hake stocks to the brink.

In the past two decades, Chile's hake population has declined by 70%, according to the Fisheries Development Institute (IFOP).

Gallardo, 46, blames years of regulations that benefited commercial "bottom" trawlers, which use drag nets to scoop up huge amounts of deep-water fish, like hake, and deplete ocean stocks.

Commercial fisheries, for their part, blame illegal fishing by small-scale fishermen like Gallardo.

Regulations fall short

Chile has been fighting a high-stakes battle against overfishing for years.

With several species in severe decline by the early 2010s from hake to jack mackerel and jumbo squid, the government a decade ago introduced annual biomass (weight) quotas designed to determine sustainable fishing levels.

Chile designated over 40% of its waters as Marine Protected Areas, where fishing is restricted, and signed up to the United Nations High Seas Treaty on protecting marine biodiversity.

A decade on, the populations of some species, such as sardines, cuttlefish and horse mackerel -- Chile's biggest fish export -- have begun to recover.

The hake numbers, however, continue to make for grim reading.

An IFOP study from 2024 showed a 17% drop in the biomass of hake stocks compared to the previous year.

Drop in the ocean

Rodrigo Catalan, conservation director of the Chilean chapter of the World Wildlife Fund, denounces a mix of poaching and overexploitation for making hake increasingly scarce.

In 2023, authorities seized 58 tons of illegal hake, the second-largest seizure by species after anchovies.

The authorities suspect it is just a drop in the ocean.

Because fishermen usually catch hake close to shore, they can reel it in quickly without being noticed.

Much of the illegal catch winds up for sale in small quantities on markets, which also makes it difficult to detect, according to the National Fisheries Service.

Too many nets, too few fish

Having to share an ever-shrinking catch -- the annual quota for hake now stands at 35,000 tons, down from 118,000 in 2001 -- has caused tempers in Chile to flare.

"There aren't enough fish for so many fishermen," Liesbeth van der Meer, director of the ocean conservation NGO Oceana, remarked.

Small-scale fishermen in Valparaiso clashed with police during three days of protests in March over delays in adopting a bill that boosted their share of the catch quota for hake, among other species.

Chile's biggest commercial fishery, PacificBlu, threatened to close shop with the loss of 3,200 jobs if its share was cut, but it later revoked the threat.

The bill, which increases the quota for artisanal fishing from 40% to 45%, was finally adopted by the Senate in early June.

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