ENDNOTES 



1. Peter Pownall, "Swedish fisheries showing signs of recovery after crisis in late 1960s and early 1970s," 

 Australian Fisheries, June 1979, p. 11. 



2. 200-niile fishing zones established by the Faroe Islands, Greenland, Iceland, Norway, and the United 

 Kingdom virtually closed the North Sea to Swedish fishermen. This resulted in many high-seas fishermen 

 leaving the fishery and promoted the Swedish government to begin negotiations with its neighbors. Rose 

 Mulllins, Sweden: A high fish consumption market. The Centre for International Business Studies, Dalhousie 

 University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, August 1978, p 6. 



3. Bruce Cole, "Management rebuild Sweden's fishing industry," National Fisherman, July 1979. 



4. A harvest of over 300,000 tons is a considerable quantity that makes Swedish fisheries reasonably important 

 when weighed among other nations. 



5. Fish species in the Baltic include freshwater eels, salmonids, and some cod and herring. The Baltic and the 

 Gulf of Bothnia contain brackish water and have low productivity. Growing industrial and agricultural pollution 

 have reduced the productivity of these waters. 



6. Svensk Fisk, Ekonomisk Forening cited in European Supplies Bulletin, Annual Data, 1992, Sea Fish Industry 

 Authority, Edinburgh, 1993, p. 47. 



7. Peter Pownall, "Swedish fisheries showing signs of recovery after crisis in late 1960s and early 1970s," 

 Australian Fisheries, June 1979, p. 20. 



8. This pattern was reported as far back and 1979 and may go back even fiirther. Annex to the Worldwide 

 Fisheries Marketing Study: Prospects to 1985 (SWEDEN), Industry, Trade and Commerce, Fisheries and 

 Oceans, Ottawa, November 1979 and Bo Fagerblad, Economic Section, U.S. Embassy, Stockholm, Sweden, 

 fax dated August 11, 1993. 



9. "Fisheries in Sweden," Fact Sheets on Sweden, The Swedish Institute, November 1978. 



10. Bo Fagerblad, Economic Section, U.S. Embassy, Stockholm, Sweden, fax dated August 11, 1993. 



11. The U.S. Embassy in Stockholm reported that there were only 4 vessels of 500-GRT and over in 1992. Bo 

 Fagerblad, Economic Section, U.S. Embassy, Stockholm, Sweden, fax dated August 11, 1993. 



12. Office of Naval Intelligence, U.S. Navy. 



13. "Sweden: Adapting to the time," World Fishing, November 1987. 



14. Bo Fagerblad, Economic Section, U.S. Embassy, Stockholm, Sweden, fax dated August 11, 1993. 



15. Bo Fagerblad, Economic Section, U.S. Embassy, Stockholm, Sweden, fax dated August 11, 1993. 



16. "Sweden: Adapting to the time," World Fishing, November 1987. 



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