February 26, 2014 — But simply improving one element of the supply chain in isolation will not get us to sustainable oceans. Without businesses throughout the supply chain that value and differentiate sustainable seafood from pirated, illegal, or wastefully processed products, there is no market incentive for fish farmers or fishermen to change their production or capture practices.
It is also important that businesses that value sustainability demonstrate that they are successfully carving out market share from traditional sources, providing investors with confidence in these businesses’ ability to succeed and grow – and encouraging them to provide the capital needed to scale their operations.
Simply put, all these links together mean that, to see large-scale business growth of fish farms and fishing operations that use sustainable practices, we need more business innovation at every point along the seafood supply chain and in the connections among these pieces.
For example, a sustainable fisherman or farmer must have accurate data and sustainable cost-effective options for their own gear and supplies. This enables them to fish and farm most sustainably. Then they must be able to sell their products up the supply chain – to a distributor or processor – that values sustainability enough to differentiate the sustainable fish from other fish that looks the same but was not captured or farmed sustainably.
In turn, this distributor must be able to partner with or sell to a processor or another distributor who also values, upholds the integrity, and who ideally pays a bit more for sustainable seafood. If any piece of the chain does not value or distinguish sustainable seafood from traditional products, it is difficult for the businesses at the beginning of the chain to survive and compete in the marketplace.
Read the full story at National Geographic