Bluefin tuna quotas set to rise 20 per cent over three years
Environmental groups fear increased catch limits of 20 per cent over three years will rapidly undermine recent conservation efforts

Fishing nations have agreed to a 20 per cent annual increase over three years in quotas of bluefin tuna caught in the Mediterranean and East Atlantic, disappointing some environmental groups.
They also failed once more to back a ban on shark finning - a practice fuelled by demand in Asia - or strengthen protection for the Mediterranean swordfish, the sources said.
The tuna decision on Monday came against the backdrop of an apparent recovery in stocks of the species, called Atlantic bluefin.
This year's quota of 13,500 tonnes will rise to 16,142 tonnes in 2015 and 19,296 tonnes in 2016, according to green groups.
The 2017 quota has been provisionally set for 23,155 tonnes, but will be reviewed in the light of a stock assessment to be carried out in 2016, they said.
The decision was the culmination of a week-long meeting in Genoa of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), an organisation that comprises 48 countries, including the United States and Japan, plus the European Union (EU).