Abstract
During the 1970s, Thailand emerged as the major distant‐water fishing nation in Southeast Asia. By the 1980s, Thailand's neighboring states had introduced 200‐nautical‐mile economic zones with the consequence that the Thai fishing industry faces a loss of approximately 300,000 square kilometers of fishing grounds that had been utilized by the Thai trawler fleet. The Thai fishing industry will face a difficult time in the next decade as neighboring states take action to remove foreign vessels from their 200‐mile zones and the Thais are forced into their small zones in the Gulf of Thailand and Andaman Sea. Thailand, as a developing country with a distant‐water fishing fleet, is a victim of the 200‐mile economic zones.