Home Asia Vietnam Urges U.S. To Reconsider Ban On Seafood Exports

Vietnam Urges U.S. To Reconsider Ban On Seafood Exports

"Nations whose fisheries were denied comparability findings are prohibited from exporting fish and fish product from those fisheries into the U.S. beginning January 1, 2026," NOAA had said earlier.
seafood exports

Vietnam has urged Washington to revisit its decision that may block certain seafood shipments from entering the U.S. market next year, warning the move would further strain an economy already pressured by American tariffs.

Vietnam‘s Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Hong Dien on Monday sent a letter to U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to ask for the “reconsideration” of an August decision by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which determined that some of Vietnam’s fishing methods posed risks to marine mammals, the ministry said in a statement.

The United States is among Vietnam’s largest seafood markets, with January-August exports rising 6.9% from a year earlier to $1.24 billion, accounting for 17.3% of Vietnam’s total seafood shipments, according to Vietnam’s customs data.

NOAA last month notified Vietnam’s agriculture ministry that it had declined to grant a “comparability finding” under the Marine Mammal Protection Act for 12 Vietnamese fishing methods, according to the statement.

“Nations whose fisheries were denied comparability findings are prohibited from exporting fish and fish product from those fisheries into the U.S. beginning January 1, 2026,” NOAA had said earlier.

Key Seafood Exports To Face Crisis

The ministry statement said the ban would hurt Vietnam’s key seafood exports, including tuna, swordfish, grouper, mackerel, mullet, crab and squid.

Dien said in the letter that reversing the decision would help “avoid serious disruptions in bilateral trade and protect the livelihood of hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese fishermen and labourers,” according to the statement.

The United States, Vietnam’s largest export market, imposed a 20% tariff on Vietnamese exports starting August 7, while transshipments through Vietnam from third countries face a levy of 40%.

August exports from Vietnam to the U.S. fell 2% from July to $13.94 billion, according to Vietnamese customs data.

“Vietnam considers the United States an important trade partner … Vietnam is committed to continuing to work closely with the United States to resolve outstanding issues in a constructive and forward-looking spirit,” Dien said in the letter.

In 2017, the European Commission also issued a “yellow card” to Vietnam after accusing it of not doing enough to fight illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, leading to a decline in exports of Vietnamese seafood to the EU.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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