'' in the
Southern Ocean from 1974 until 2003 (
FAO data) Fishing began in the early 1960s, when the
Soviet Union launched its first experimental operations. All throughout the decade, preparatory activities were carried out, resulting in small catches of a few tens of tonnes per year. Scientists mapped the locations of krill swarms to determine the best fishing grounds, and engineers developed and improved the equipment necessary to fish and process krill. In 1972, the Soviets set up a permanent fishery in
Antarctic waters, landing 7,500 tonnes in 1973 and then expanding quickly. The Japanese began experimental krill fishing operation in the area in 1972 and started full-scale commercial operations in 1975. Krill catch increased rapidly. In the 1980s, a few additional nations started operating in the area:
Poland,
Chile, and
South Korea. Their catches amounted to a few thousand tonnes annually; the lion's share went to the Soviet Union, followed by Japan. A peak in krill harvest was reached in 1982 with a total production of over 528,000 tonnes, of which the Soviet Union produced 93%. In the following two years, production declined. It is unclear whether this was due to the discovery of
fluorides in the krill's exoskeleton or to marketing problems. The trade recovered quickly, though, and reached more than 400,000 tonnes again in 1987. With the demise of the Soviet Union, two of its successor nations,
Russia and
Ukraine, took over the operations. Russian operations and catches dwindled, and were abandoned altogether in 1993. Since then,
Japan is one of the top producers, but facing stiff competition by other countries. Since 2000, the small
South Korean Antarctic krill fishery has also expanded considerably. A
U.S. company entered the market in 2001. The
Norwegian company
Aker ASA entered the business in 2003 with a ship registered in
Vanuatu. In 1982, the
Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) came into force, as part of the
Antarctic Treaty System. The CCAMLR was originally signed by fifteen states; as of 2004 it had 24 members. Its purpose is to regulate the fishery in the Southern Ocean to ensure a long-term sustainable development and to prevent
overfishing. In 1993, the CCAMLR set forth catch quotas for krill, which amount to nearly five million tonnes per year. The annual catch of
Euphausia superba since the mid-1990s is about 100–120,000 tonnes annually, i.e., about one fiftieth of the CCAMLR catch quota. Still, the CCAMLR is criticized for having defined its catch limits too generously, as there are no precise estimates of the total biomass of Antarctic krill available and there have been reports indicating that it is declining since the 1990s. Plans to take up to 746,000 tonnes a year were disclosed at the 2007 meeting of CCAMLR. Fishing for Antarctic krill was commonly done from large stern trawlers using
midwater trawls before the purpose built krill trawlers like
Antarctic Endurance were planned and put into use. For scientific purposes, vertical trawls using, for example, a bongo net, are also employed. In 2018 it was announced that almost every krill fishing company operating in Antarctica will abandon operations in huge areas around the Antarctic Peninsula from 2020, including “buffer zones” around breeding colonies of penguins. ==Around Japan==