The NE Sakhalin Island pink salmon fishery on Russia’s east coast has been awarded Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certification.

This is the third fishery in Russia to earn MSC certification. The Iturup Island pink and chum salmon fishery became certified in September 2009 and the Barents Sea cod and haddock fishery, managed jointly between Russia and Norway, achieved certification in 2010. Four other fisheries in Russia are currently in full assessment.
The fishery occurs in FAO statistical area 61, along the east coast of Sakhalin Island in the Nogliki and Smirnykh districts. The assessment encompassed all companies fishing in the two regions, but use of the certificate will apply only to the companies that have agreed to a certificate sharing arrangement with the Sakhalin Salmon Initiative Center and the Sakhalin Regional Fisheries Association. This client group of fishers organised in part as a result of efforts to demonstrate to markets their sustainable practices in contrast to illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing practices attributed to this region.
The companies in the certified client group primarily use coastal trap nets to fish for pink salmon. A minority of the companies use diverse gear types such as river weirs, beach seines, and floating gillnets. Coastal trap nets are considered passive since the nets are set in a single location for fish to swim into, and thus catch per net set varies depending on the intensity and strength of any particular run in that locale.
The annual pink salmon harvest in the Nogliki and Smirnykh regions has averaged 5,407mt from 2001 to 2010. The market for the fish is mainly confined to domestic consumption but there has been increased interest from USA and Europe.