Over the last five years, the Environmental Justice Foundation has interviewed more than 430 fishers who had worked across 249 squid vessels in the Northwest Indian Ocean, the Southeast Pacific, and the Southwest Atlantic.

What they described—in testimony after testimony, from fishery to fishery—reveals a system of injustice at sea: forced labour, shark finning, crew deaths, and tainted catch that flows onto the plates of consumers who have no way of knowing where it came from or who paid the price for it.

This is how the global squid fleet operates when no one is watching.

The global squid market is worth US $12.7 billion.

The EU, US, China, Japan and South Korea are its biggest buyers.

The fleets supplying those markets operate on the high seas: beyond national jurisdiction, beyond meaningful oversight, and in most cases beyond any multilateral body with the mandate or the will to stop them.

In a system where tainted squid products enter global markets every day, consumers have no choice as governments and retailers are becoming complicit in a status quo of exploitation and secrecy.

Exploitation in all forms

Crew Testimonials

from Chinese vessels in the southwest Atlantic
There was violence every day.

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WATCH NOW

How can governments change the status quo?

OUT OF SITE, OUT OF CONTROL

How unregulated squid fishing is driving forced labour and destructive practices at sea

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Resources

PRESS RELEASE

EJF + Only One launch Out of Sight. Out of Control. campaign

BRIEF

Out of Sight. Out of Control.

How unregulated squid fishing is driving forced labour and destructive practices at sea

DOCUMENTARY

Unregulated: The South Atlantic Squid Fishing Boom

FAQs

Aren't there laws to govern international waters?

Why are these fisheries unregulated?

What is "Mile 201" and how could it become relevant in a multilateral context?

What is at-sea trans-shipment, and why does it matter?

How does this squid reach my plate?

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