June4 , 2026

    Russia may raise fish, seafood exports to China

    Related

    Colombo West International Terminal Sets New Throughput Record in May 2026

    Colombo West International Terminal (CWIT) has achieved a new...

    CONCOR Launches Domestic Container Service from Mysore to Kolkata

    In a significant boost to multimodal logistics connectivity, Container...

    MV PROPEL FORTUNE Berths at Deendayal Port with Coal Cargo for UltraTech Cement

    The vessel MV PROPEL FORTUNE has successfully berthed at...

    Mawani Launches New Shipping Service Connecting Jeddah, India and Djibouti

    Saudi Ports Authority (Mawani) has announced the launch of...

    Share

    Russia hopes to increase its marine product exports to China in the wake of China’s ban on Japanese seafood imports after the release of treated radioactive water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear power plant into the sea.

    Russia is one of the biggest marine product suppliers to China, with 894 Russian companies allowed to export seafood, Rosselkhoznadzor, the Russian food safety watchdog, said in July.

    In a statement late on Friday, Rosselkhoznadzor said it was seeking to increase the number of exporters.

    “The Chinese market in general is promising for Russian fish products. We hope to increase the number of certified Russian companies and ships, the volume of products and its range,” the Rosselkhoznadzor statement said.

    To aid that effort, Rosselkhoznadzor plans to continue dialogue with China on seafood safety issues and finish negotiations with China on regulations for Russian marine products supply to the country, the statement said.

    China has already banned some food imports from Japan but Thursday’s total ban was prompted by concerns about the “risk of radioactive contamination” after it started releasing the treated water.

    China was the destination for over a half of Russian aquatic products exports between January and August, the statement said without providing figures, dominated by pollock, herring, flounder, sardine, cod and crab.

    Russia exported 2.3 million metric tons of marine products last year worth about $6.1 billion, around a half of its overall catch, with China, South Korea and Japan being biggest importers, according to Russia’s fisheries agency.

    Japan said criticism from Russia and China was unsupported by scientific evidence and pollution levels in the water will be below those considered safe for drinking under World Health Organization standards.

    Still, Rosselkhoznadzor said it has tightened the screening of Japan seafood imports though the volumes are insignificant.

    The regulator also said the direction of currents in the Russian Far East, where about 70 percent of Russia’s seafood is caught, “would prevent contamination” of marine products caught by Russian ships.

    It has also tightened the radiological control of seafood caught in Russian waters which are relatively close to Fukushima and would test selected samples for radiation levels, Interfax reported on Thursday, citing Rosselkhoznadzor’s Pacific office.

    spot_img