Fishers celebrate Trump's seafood order while conservation groups fear
overfishing
[April 21, 2025] By
PATRICK WHITTLE
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — President Donald Trump's executive order to boost
the U.S. commercial fishing industry drew praise from commercial fishing
groups and condemnation from environmental organizations who said they
fear cutting regulations will harm fish populations that have already
dwindled in some areas of the oceans.
The order represents a dramatic shift in federal policy on fishing in
U.S. waters by prioritizing commercial fishing interests over efforts to
allow the fish supply to increase.
The president described his decision as “an easy one” that will improve
the U.S. commercial fishing industry by peeling back regulations and
opening up harvesting in previously protected areas.
“The United States should be the world’s dominant seafood leader,” he
said Thursday, citing the nation’s seafood trade deficit, which is more
than $20 billion.
Some environmental groups cited the importance of relying on the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, which has
guided U.S. fishery management for nearly 50 years and was intended to
combat overfishing. The number of fish stocks on the federal overfished
list grew from 40 in 2013 to 47 in 2023; conservationists said they fear
that number will grow with weakened regulations.
“These executive orders don’t loosen red tape - they unravel the very
safety net that protects our oceans, our economy, and our seafood
dinners,” said Beth Lowell, vice president of Oceana, a conservation
group. “For decades, the U.S. science-based approach to fisheries
management has rebuilt declining stocks, kept American fishers on the
water, and protected important places and wildlife.”

Some sectors of the fishing industry have been hit hard by environmental
changes and overfishing, including in the Northeast, where
once-lucrative industries for Maine shrimp and Atlantic cod long ago
dried up. West Coast species, including some kinds of salmon, have also
been depleted.
There have also been successes. The federal government said last year it
was able to remove Atlantic coast bluefish and a Washington coast stock
of coho salmon from the overfished list.
Fishermen said they see a brighter future thanks to the Trump executive
order. The changes represent a “thoughtful, strategic approach” that
could be a lifeline to America’s fishermen, said Lisa Wallenda Picard,
president and chief executive officer of the National Fisheries
Institute in Virginia.
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In this July 27, 2018, file photo, a sternman on a lobster fishing
boat photographs the sunrise on the way out of Portland Harbor off
South Portland, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)
 “The EO outlines key actions to
benefit every link in the supply chain — from hardworking fishermen
to parents who serve their family this nutritious and sustainable
protein at home,” Wallenda Picard said. “Importantly, the order
calls for reducing unnecessary regulatory burdens on fishermen and
seafood producers while also promoting the many benefits of eating
seafood as part of a healthy, balanced diet.”
Trump's order came on the same day he issued a
proclamation allowing commercial fishing in Pacific Islands Heritage
Marine National Monument. The monument was created by President
George W. Bush in early 2009 and consists of about 495,189 square
miles (1,282,534 square kilometers) in the central Pacific Ocean.
Environmental groups, some of whom vowed to challenge attempts to
weaken protections in certain areas, also criticized that move.
“This is one of the most pristine tropical marine environments in
the world that already faces dire threats from climate change and
ocean acidification,” said David Henkin, an attorney with
conservation group Earthjustice. “We will do everything in our power
to protect the monument.”
Countering conservation groups, the Trump administration argues that
restrictions such as catch limits and competition with wind power
companies for fishing grounds have held back one of the country’s
oldest enterprises.
"In addition to overregulation, unfair trade practices have put our
seafood markets at a competitive disadvantage,” Trump's executive
order stated.
The order order gives Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick a month to
identify “the most heavily overregulated fisheries requiring action
and take appropriate action to reduce the regulatory burden on
them.” It also calls on regional fishing managers to find ways to
reduce burdens on domestic fishing and increase fishing production.
The order also calls for the development of a comprehensive seafood
trade strategy. It charges Lutnick with reviewing existing marine
monuments, which are underwater protected areas, and providing
recommendations of any that should be opened to commercial fishing.
Trump also targeted marine monuments in his first term.
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