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  • Ban on caviar partially lifted

    Posted on Wed, Jan. 03, 2007

    INTERNATIONAL TRADE
    Ban on caviar partially lifted

    A move by a U.N.- sponsored organization lets Caspian Sea nations legally
    sell limited amounts of caviar.
    BY FRANK JORDANS
    Associated Press

    GENEVA - A United Nations panel has lifted a ban on international
    trade in several types of caviar from the Caspian Sea, but it still
    hasn't decided whether to permit exports of the highly prized -- and
    hugely expensive -- beluga variety, an official said Tuesday.

    The move by a U.N.-sponsored conservation organization means that
    Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia and Turkmenistan can legally sell
    limited amounts of the gourmet delicacy on the world market in 2007.

    Last year, the U.N. Convention on International Trade in Endangered
    Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, known as CITES, banned the global
    trade in most Caspian caviar -- the processed eggs of the sturgeon --
    to help protect the endangered fish.

    Only Iran was allowed to export caviar from certain fish that are more
    abundant in its waters. The website of a Seattle caviar company offers
    one type of Iranian caviar for $2,960 per pound. Beluga caviar, still
    under a U.N. ban, can sell for $5,000 a pound or more, depending on
    taste and quality.

    ''This is very good news,'' said Armen Petrossian, whose family
    business in Paris has been selling caviar for more than a
    century. ``It's very important that there is a legal trade in order to
    support the restocking efforts.''

    The legal market in caviar is about 100 tons annually, he said, and
    worth about $265 million. The black market, supplied by poachers, is
    about the same size, Petrossian estimated.

    The U.N.'s 2006 ban ''undoubtedly helped to spur improvements to the
    monitoring programs and scientific assessments carried out jointly by
    the five Caspian neighbors,'' CITES Secretary-General Willem
    Wijnstekers said.

    The Caspian nations -- all former Soviet states, except Iran -- have
    made great progress in their conservation efforts, said CITES chief
    scientific officer David Morgan. But he added: ``I can't disguise the
    fact that the situation is still serious in all countries of origin
    for all sturgeon species.'' The Caspian's sturgeon population has
    declined by more than 90 percent in the last century, he said.

    ''That's why we have to redouble our efforts together with the
    countries concerned to make sure that we can rebuild the sturgeon
    stocks in the interests of the species and the local people who are
    using them,'' Morgan said.

    Under the U.N. action, caviar and meat from the Caspian stocks of
    Russian sturgeon, Persian sturgeon and stellate sturgeon can now be
    legally tradedon the world market.

    CITES, based in Geneva, sets annual quotas for caviar exports that are
    recognized by many countries. Its 2006 quota for caviar from beluga
    sturgeon and several other Caspian species was zero.

    Although CITES has lifted its effective ban on the trade in three
    species, its export quotas for those species are still on average 15
    percent lower compared with 2005.

    CITES postponed for a month a decision on whether to permit the export
    of caviar from the rare and expensive beluga sturgeon to give the five
    Caspian nations time to provide more information on the health of
    their beluga sturgeon stocks.


    © 2007 MiamiHerald.com and wire service sources.
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