Commercial fishing could expand to more marine monuments

By Jennifer Yachnin, Daniel Cusick | 04/18/2025 01:37 PM EDT

President Donald Trump signed orders Thursday that open a Pacific monument to fishing and calls for reviews of four other marine monuments.

Seabirds rest on a pier at Johnston Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, which is part of the Pacific Islands Heritage Marine National Monument.

Seabirds on a pier at Johnston Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, one of seven refuges that are part of the Pacific Islands Heritage Marine National Monument. Jordan Akiyama/Fish and Wildlife Service

President Donald Trump’s order to open a vast national monument in the Pacific Ocean to commercial fishing for the first time in two decades — and indications he could soon do the same to other protected waters — drew fire from environmental advocacy groups that warned the move could decimate fishing stocks.

Trump on Thursday issued an executive order rolling back prohibitions on commercial fishing across 400,000 square miles of the Pacific Islands Heritage Marine National Monument, or more than 80 percent of the sprawling site. The monument is located about 900 miles southwest of Hawaii in the central Pacific Ocean.

He issued a second order, titled “Restoring American Seafood Competitiveness,” that directs the Commerce and Interior departments to conduct a review of all marine national monuments — there are five, including the Pacific Islands Heritage site — and issue recommendations about any additional ones that should allow commercial fishing.

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“Federal overregulation has restricted fishermen from productively harvesting American seafood including through restrictive catch limits, selling our fishing grounds to foreign offshore wind companies, inaccurate and outdated fisheries data, and delayed adoption of modern technology,” Trump wrote in that order.

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