How 100 MILLION sharks are butchered every year including having fins brutally hacked off while still alive to make soup

How 100 MILLION sharks are butchered every year including having fins brutally hacked off while still alive to make soup

The Sun

BELOW the deck of a notorious poaching vessel off the coast of Liberia, coast guard soldiers find a scene of unimaginable gore.

The ship’s freezer is filled with the bodies of sharks with their fins hacked off – in a single 15-day voyage, its crew can butcher 66,000 sharks.

Shark fins have become an extremely valuable leading to 100 million sharks being killed every year

Shark fins have become an extremely valuable leading to 100 million sharks being killed every yearCredit: AFP
Shark fin soup, which is a delicacy in China, plays a big role in fuelling the annual massacre

Shark fin soup, which is a delicacy in China, plays a big role in fuelling the annual massacreCredit: AFP

Fishermen take the fins because they are extremely valuable, making up around $380million of the $1billion-a-year shark product trade.

Fins are particularly prized for their use in shark fin soup, a delicacy in Chinese cuisine.

The trade is often unregulated and, in many cases, barbaric – some vessels cut sharks’ fins off while they’re still alive before throwing them back in the water to drown.

Every year, around 100million sharks are killed as a result, with their livers, skin, and cartilage also valuable commodities – some species’ population have collapsed by over 90 per cent.

Filmmaker Eli Roth explores the gruesome shark trade in his new film Fin on Discovery+ for Shark Week.

As well as the sharks’ suffering, the bloodbath has horrific consequences on communities in some of the poorest places on Earth – not to mention on the future of the ocean.

“An ocean without sharks is a very, very scary thought,” Gary Stokes of conservation group Sea Shepherd says in the film.

“Once we remove all those sharks, everything else will go into anarchy.”

‘Worst thing I’ve ever seen’

Finning happens all over the world – often in sickening circumstances.

Off the coast of Los Frailes, Mexico, Roth witnesses mako sharks being caught for their fins.

The predators are hooked and dragged to the surface of the water where fishermen beat them to death with baseball bats before hauling them into the boat.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything so horrible done to an animal live,” Roth says in the film.

“It’s the worst thing I’ve ever seen.”

Returning to the shore, fishermen slice the fins off their catch on the sand – after drying for 10 days, they can get around £50 per kilo for fins by selling to a company that supplies demand in China.

You are not going to be able to fish that many sharks in ten years

Regina Domingo
“These people, it’s one of the only resources they have,” conservationist Regina Domingo tells Roth.

“The fins are worth a lot of money. But what they need to understand is you are not going to be able to fish that many sharks in ten years.”

The astonishing demand for shark fins is driven in part by the status symbol of shark fin soup in China.

Around 17,000 tonnes of shark fins are shipped to Hong Kong each year, equating to over 23million dead sharks.

 

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How 100 MILLION sharks are butchered every year including having fins brutally hacked off while still alive to make soup

 

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