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South Korea's Registers Decline in 2013 Fishery Output

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SOUTH KOREA - South Korea's fishery output inched down last year from a year earlier as stricter fishing regulations, low water temperatures and red tide in coastal areas hampered catch.

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Production of fisheries amounted to 3.16 million tons last year, down 0.9 per cent, or 28,000 tons, from a year earlier, according to Statistics Korea.

The output is valued at 7.2 trillion won ($6.7 billion) last year, which is also down six per cent from 2012 when Korea registered 7.69 trillion won, YonhapNewsAgency reports.

The agency attributed the decline to toughened deep water fishing regulations coupled with such unfavorable conditions as low water temperatures and red tide during the summer, which hinder fish catch in coastal areas.

Lowered demand for fisheries from worries over radioactive contamination in Japan also drove down the output and value figures, it added.

Deep-water catch was down 4.4 per cent on-year to some 550,000 tons in 2013, while coastal fishery production came to 1.05 million tons, down 4.3 per cent form a year earlier, the data showed.

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