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WWF's International Smart Gear Competition - Press Room

WWF International Smart Gear Comptetition winner will be awarded $30,000 grand prizefor a fishing gear innovation that could save thousands of seabirds from dying accidentally on longlines each year.

Seabird saving invention snags top Smart Gear prize

A team of Australian inventors today were awarded the $30,000 grand prize in the International WWF Smart Gear Competition for a fishing gear innovation that could save thousands of seabirds from dying accidentally on longlines each year.  

 

Posted on 15 September 2009 | 0 comments | Read more

Drift net fishing in the Mediterranean Sea.

Putin puts writing on 'walls of death' in Russia

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has proposed outlawing fishing with drift nets, otherwise known as “walls of death”, following a lengthy campaign by fishermen and politicians in Kamchatka as well as local organizations including WWF-Russia.

Posted on 17 February 2009 | 4 comments | Read more

Smart Gear

Global competition seeks to net smartest hook, line and sinker

A $US 57,500 prize fund is on offer for the best new fishing gears designed to reduce bycatch in the fourth International Smart Gear Competition, launched today by WWF.

Posted on 27 January 2009 | Read more

Phil Ruhle Sr., fishermen, innovator and advocate for ocean conservation.

WWF mourns the loss of Phil Ruhle Sr., fishermen, innovator and advocate for ocean conservation.

WWF was honored to have the opportunity to work with Phil Ruhle Sr. when his team won the Smart Gear Award. We were deeply impressed by his enthusiasm and his commitment to ocean conservation. Our thoughts and best wishes are with Phil's family at this sad time.

Posted on 30 July 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

Fishing boat, Puntarenas, Costa Rica.

New website on reducing marine turtle bycatch in the Eastern Pacific

The WWF Eastern Pacific Marine Turtle Bycatch Programme website has been launched to share information on  WWF's Latin America and Caribbean Sustainable Fisheries Program is working witg fishers and other stakeholders to transform longline fisheries toward sustainability.

Posted on 22 April 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

Lethal whale "research" programmes produce meat, not answers: WWF

Japan would do better whale research by not killing whales, said WWF on the eve of a key International Whaling Commission planning meeting.
 
Today, much more plentiful and reliable information is available using the many better new ways of collecting whale data rather than much the same old ways of killing them.

Posted on 05 March 2008 | 2 comments | Read more

Leatherback turtle caught up in a French Tuna purse-seine fishery in the Atlantic ocean.

New guide to reducing bycatch goes online

As a service to the long-term sustainability of both fish stocks and fishing communities, WWF has established an online resource providing up-to-date information on bycatch (the capture of non-target creatures in fishing gear) and how to reduce it.


Posted on 12 February 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

Logo for Smart Gear Competition

WWF competition nets sustainable fishing solutions

A team of inventors from the United States has won the third WWF International Smart Gear Competition for an invention that could save fish and other marine life from dying or being discarded each year.

Posted on 15 November 2007 | 0 comments | Read more

WWF's Smartgear Competition Honored by NOAA

The Fisheries Service of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) today honored WWF's Smartgear competition which aims to make fishing gear more wildlife-friendly. The recognition is part of the agency’s second-annual Sustainable Fisheries Leadership Award. The awards will be presented at a dinner in Washington, D.C., on June 7.

Posted on 05 April 2007 | 0 comments | Read more

Logo for Smart Gear Competition

WWF launches fishing gear competition to reduce marine bycatch

WWF is seeking new designs for fishing gear that reduces marine bycatch — the accidental catch and related deaths of millions of marine species each year. Enter WWF's third annual international Smart Gear Competition today!

Posted on 07 February 2007 | 0 comments | Read more