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Carmignac Photojournalism Award - 15th Edition
Various species of sharks, some of which are endangered, while others are listed as vulnerable, hauled on shore at dawn by commercial fishermen at the Tanjung Luar port on Monday, June 9, 2025, in East Lombok, Indonesia. © Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac

Nicole Tung »

Carmignac Photojournalism Award - 15th Edition

OVERFISHING IN SOUTH EAST ASIA, AN ECOLOGICAL AND HUMAN DRAMA

Award:

Fri 5 Sep 12:00

Visa pour l’Image Festival

Auditorium Charles Trénet
Perpignan

Fondation Carmignac

24, place Vendôme
75001 Paris

+33 (0)1-70 92 34 65


www.fondationcarmignac.com

Carmignac Photojournalism Award - 15th Edition
Commercial fishermen are seen out at sea, on Tuesday, May 27, 2025, about 50 nautical miles off the coast of Rizal, Palawan, the Philippines. Many filipino commercial and small-scale fishers are being chased or hassled by Chinese Coast Guard, Navy, and militia ships while out at sea. Previously, attacks or harassment in this area did not exist, but was well-documented in other areas. Since August 2024, incidences of harassment have started and increased since. Many Filipino fishermen believe that the Chinese are now moving to build outposts in the nearby Sabina Shoal to dominate both trade routes and the fishing industry. © Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac

Carmignac Photojournalism Award - 15th Edition

OVERFISHING IN SOUTH EAST ASIA, AN ECOLOGICAL AND HUMAN DRAMA
A report by Nicole Tung, laureate of the 15th edition


Friday, September 5, 2025, 12-1pm
Visa pour l’Image Festival, Auditorium Charles Trénet, Perpignan, France
Talk with Nicole Tung and Charles Autheman,International consultant on labour and human rights and Lecturer at HEC and Sciences Po Paris.

The Carmignac Photojournalism Award is pleased to announce that Nicole Tung has been selected as the laureate of its 15th edition, dedicated to Southeast Asia and the human and environmental rights violations linked to illegal fishing and overfishing.

Nicole was officially announced as the laureate, and her work unveiled at the Visa pour l’image festival on Thursday, September 4, 2025.

Her report was carried out over a nine-month period with the support of Fondation Carmignac. It examines the complex dynamics of industrial fishing in the region and its consequences for marine ecosystems and coastal communities.

Through field reporting in Thailand, the Philippines, and Indonesia, Tung documents a highly opaque industry in which access is often limited—especially at sea, where operations remain largely hidden from public scrutiny. Her report explores issues such as the rollback of fishing regulations, the impact on local fishers by geopolitical pressures, and the working conditions of migrant laborers at sea.

In Thailand, she examines how reforms introduced after reports in 2015 on sea slavery led to improved labor conditions—but are now at risk of being rolled back as government ties to the fishing industry grow stronger. In the Philippines, she focused on the region's escalating geopolitical tensions, documenting how the growing dominance of Chinese maritime forces has made fishing zones increasingly inaccessible, leading to significant loss of income and livelihoods for local communities. Her investigation into the tuna trade highlights the difficulties of tracing global seafood supply chains—from small coastal canneries to sushi markets in Japan and beyond—underscoring the lack of transparency.

In Indonesia, Nicole reported testimonies of extreme labor abuse at sea—including recruitment through debt bondage, withheld wages, and reports of violence aboard foreign-owned vessels. She also looked into the shark trade, where meat is sold locally while fins and bones are exported, mostly to China and Hong Kong for use in cosmetics and traditional medicine.

Her work also touches on the effectiveness of Marine Protected Areas, alternative livelihoods through tourism, and the impact of global seafood supply chains. Southeast Asia plays a central role in global fisheries, accounting for more than half of the world’s fish production. Yet the region is also among the most affected by illegal fishing, environmental degradation, and widespread labor exploitation—forces that threaten the future of both marine ecosystems and the coastal communities that depend on them.

Carmignac Photojournalism Award - 15th Edition
A Burmese dock worker sorted different fish species after a catch from a Thai vessel was unloaded at a landing site in Ranong, Thailand, on Thursday, January 23, 2025. © Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac

THE LAUREATE
Nicole Tung is a freelance photojournalist, born in Hong Kong. She graduated from New York University in 2009, and freelances for international publications and NGOs, primarily covering the Middle East region.

She has covered the conflicts in Libya and Syria extensively from 2011, focusing on the plight of civilians, the lives of Native American war veterans in the U.S.,the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, and the aftermath of ISIS in Iraq and Syria. Her work often explores those most affected by conflict and the consequences of war. Ms. Tung has documented the Russian invasion of Ukraine since 2022 for publications including Harper's Magazine, The Washington Post and The New York Times, and the aftermath of devastating earthquakes in Turkey and Syria in 2023. Her work has been exhibited at various festivals worldwide and has received multiple awards for her work. In 2025, Nicole was part of The New York Times’ team who were named Pulitzer finalists for Breaking News Photography, and is also the recipient of the Philip Jones Griffiths Award. She is based in Istanbul.

THE JURY

  • Olivier Poivre d’Arvor, Special Envoy of the French President for the United Nations Ocean Conference, French Ambassador for the Ocean and the Poles
  • Candida Ng, Deputy Photo Director for the Asia-Pacific at Agence France-Presse
  • Claire Nouvian, President and Founder of the nonprofit conservation organization BLOOM
  • Romain Troublé, General Director, Tara
  • Mona Boshnaq, London-based senior photo editor at The New York Times
  • Kiana Hayeri, Photojournalist, 14th laureate with Mélissa Cornet of the Carmignac Photojournalism Award
  • Dr. Daniel Pauly, Researcher, marine biologist
  • Dimitri Beck, Photography Director, Polka

THE PRE JURY
  • Tess Raimbeau, Photo Editor, Libération
  • Valerio Vincenzo, Photography Director, Géo France
  • Dimitri Beck, Photography Director, Polka

UPCOMING EVENT
Friday, September 5, 2025, 12-1pm
Visa pour l’Image Festival, Auditorium Charles Trénet, Perpignan, France
Talk with Nicole Tung and Charles Autheman,International consultant on labour and human rights and Lecturer at HEC and Sciences Po Paris.

The Carmignac Photojournalism Award
In 2009, while media and photojournalism faced an unprecedented crisis, Edouard Carmignac created the Carmignac Photojournalism Award to support photographers in the field. Every year, it funds the production of an investigative photo reportage on human rights violations and geo-strategic issues in the world. The Fondation Carmignac provides the laureate with financial and human resources to carry out their project and produces both a dedicated website and a traveling exhibition, aiming to shed light on the crises and challenges which the contemporary world is facing.

After 15 years of committed support to photojournalism and this edition dedicated to overfishing in South East Asia, the Award will be put on hold in 2026, as the Fondation Carmignac will redirect its focus toward the development of its cultural venue on the island of Porquerolles.

More information: fondationcarmignac.com/en/photojournalism-award/

Fondation Carmignac
The Fondation Carmignac was founded in 2000 by Edouard Carmignac, a French entrepreneur, CEO and Chairman of asset management company Carmignac. Today, it is structured around three main pillars which developed one after the other. The Carmignac Collection, which has over 300 works of contemporary art, the Carmignac Photojournalism Award and the Villa Carmignac in Porquerolles which offers temporary exhibitions and a rich cultural programme in a 2000-square-meter art space set in a 15-hectare estate at the heart of a protected site.

More information: fondationcarmignac.com

Carmignac Photojournalism Award - 15th Edition
Family members of Filipino fishermen placed bait on fishing lines ready to be used, in Quezon, Palawan, the Philippines, on Saturday, May 24, 2025. © Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac
Carmignac Photojournalism Award - 15th Edition
Filipino fishermen unload catches of Yellowfin tuna, Bigeye tuna, and Blue Marlin, after being at sea for approximately one month, at General Santos fish port, the Philippines, on Wednesday, May 21, 2025. General Santos is known as the Philippines’ tuna capital and hub for tuna fishing and exports of the products. The city hosts numerous processing facilities where the fish, primarily tuna, is packaged or canned for sale to the Filipino market and for export worldwide. © Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac