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Wildlife trade group refuses to defend 2 popularly eaten shark species

THE HAGUE -- The world's oversight body on wildlife trade refused yesterday to defend two sharks from over-exploitation for a range of food, from supermarket fish-and-chips to gourmet shark fin soup.

The debate on regulating the export of popular sharks was one of the most contentious in the 12-day meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, or CITES, and touched the raw nerve of big-profit industries and national interests.

The European Union asked the triennial CITES conference to control the trade of porbeagle and spiny dogfish, two shark species worth millions of dollars a year in international trade.

The preliminary decision by the 171-nation body dismayed environmental groups, which cited the rapid decline of sharks that are slow to reproduce and have become increasingly popular in Europe and Japan.

Both species "are in a tailspin due to over-fishing and poor management," said Greenpeace activist Carroll Muffett.

The decision by a technical committee must be confirmed in the full plenary next Friday.

Germany, which sponsored the proposal, said it would try to overturn the outcome, in which a majority of voting countries supported the resolution but not enough for the required two-thirds.

"We believe there is an urgent need for action," delegation chief Jochen Flasbarth told reporters.

Only about 100 countries cast votes, and several delegations were expected to arrive only for the crucial second week.

CITES, a 1975 treaty, lists more than 7,000 animals and 32,000 plants that are subject to trade regulations and require export permits. About 800 are banned.

Norway, speaking for many opponents, said the treaty was the wrong forum to deal with the shark problem: "We are concerned at the growing involvement of CITES in commercial issues," said Norwegian delegate Oestein Stoerkersen.

Many delegates cited a report by the UN Food and Agricultural Organization, which recommended against regulation. The FAO said that although stocks have been degraded in many areas, the species are widely distributed in the world's oceans and are not threatened with extinction.

But the United States swung behind the proposal. "This is about more than these two species," US delegate David Cottingham told the conference. "We remain concerned about the serial depletion of one shark species after another."

Three shark species already are listed for trade restrictions: the great white shark, the basking shark, and the whale shark.

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