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SEAFOOD PRICES REFLECT A COMPLEX SUPPLY CHAIN

June 25, 2020 โ€” As restaurants and other foodservice operations began shutting down in March, the demand for seafood plummeted.

โ€œThe fishing industry is foodservice dependent, so once the demand decreased, the fishermen stopped going out in their boats,โ€ says Barton Seaver, a Maine-based chef and lead educator for seafoodliteracy.com.

โ€œAbout 75% of the seafood consumed in the U.S. is sold by restaurants,โ€ confirms Ben Martens, executive director of Maine Coast Fishermenโ€™s Association, a nonprofit that supports sustainability and community-based fishermen.

Now that restaurants are reopening, itโ€™s taking a while for the fresh supply to get back up to speed, leading to higher prices. Smaller fisheries and dayboat fleets that typically supply higher-end restaurants were told by wholesalers not to go out fishing during the pandemic. At the Portland Fish Exchange in Maine, prices were down by 34% as late as May, says Martens. Although fishermen were struggling economically, they were getting killed by low prices at the docks.

Read the full story at Restaurant Business

Seafood fraud a hot topic at US restaurant show

May 21, 2019 โ€” Seafood fraud is a hot topic at the ongoing National Restaurant Show, taking place from 18 to 21 May in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.

Celebrity chefs Barton Seaver, Rick Bayless, and Andrew Zimmern all touched on the topic during public appearances at the show, as did executives from several top foodservice companies.

โ€œThe seafood industry as a whole is ill-served and everyone loses when seafood fraud happens,โ€ Barton Seaver, a chef, author, and founder of the Coastal Culinary Academy, told SeafoodSource at the event, which is the largest U.S. restaurant show.

Seaver spoke on a panel about seafood mislabeling and sustainability along with Bayless, who is the chef and owner of Frontera Grill and other restaurants, and Josephine Theal, director of category management for food and hospital management firm Delaware North.

โ€œWe as operators create an environment in which fraud can profit,โ€ Seaver said. โ€œIf I as a chef am only willing to buy cod, then Iโ€™ve created a situation where pollock needs to become cod,โ€ Seaver said. Some restaurants are okay with buying the โ€œflaky white fish of the dayโ€ and labeling it โ€œcod,โ€ Seaver added.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Fish 2.0 Offers Cash, Advice to an Ocean of Seafood Start-Ups

January 25, 2018 โ€” In a large ballroom at Stanford Universityโ€™s Arrillaga Alumni Center, jittery entrepreneurs make their way onto a small stage to pitch their sustainable seafood ventures. Out of 184 applications, only 40 have made the cut. Among the finalists are a mail-order oyster startup that will ship the food overnight to your door, a manufacturer of devices that track lost fishing gear, an Alaskan processing facility looking to expand, and training programs that teach Peruvian fishermen how to operate more sustainably.

Theyโ€™re taking part in the third bi-annual Fish 2.0 competition, and the stakes are high. Many of these entrepreneurs have never made a pitch in front of an audience before. And with some of the largest and most respected investors in the sector, including Rabobank, Aqua-Spark, and Obvious Ventures, eagerly looking on, competitors are anxious to make a good impression. Flanked by projectors and armed only with a microphone and a remote to advance their slides, entrepreneurs from as far away as Italy, Peru, and the Solomon Islands have only a few minutes to make their pitch in front of a four-judge panel and a room full of potentially lucrative connections.

With global demand for sustainable seafood growing rapidly, the industry hasnโ€™t been able to keep pace. Programs like Fish 2.0 hope to meet that demand and support the sectorโ€™s growth by connecting investors to emerging businesses. Similar to accelerators like Mixing Bowl, Imagine H2O, and the Chobani Incubator, Fish 2.0 aims to strengthen the sustainable seafood movement by helping ventures become financially sustainable, scalable, and profitable.

Although Fish 2.0 is framed as a competition, networking is what really matters for most participants. The eight competition winners each receive $5,000 in prize money, but for past winner Norah Eddy, whose company Salty Girl Seafood sells sustainable fish in ready-to-cook, pre-marinated packages, the experience and exposure were more important than the actual cash. Eddy says the connections she fostered at Fish 2.0 two years ago have remained fruitful for Salty Girl, which has expanded its line of products since they won a prize at the competition.

โ€œWeโ€™ve subsequently raised money and our connection to Fish 2.0 has only served us well in business following the competition,โ€ Eddy adds.

A Forum for Changemakers

Fish 2.0 is the brainchild of Monica Jain, a Wharton MBA graduate and former marine biologist, and it brings her two passions together. โ€œThere are a lot of great companies starting up and they need capital to grow effectively,โ€ she says. โ€œItโ€™s the same in every field. We canโ€™t expect innovative business to grow without capital.โ€

Funded by academic institutions, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, USAID, the U.S. State Department, investment funds, and others, the Fish 2.0 process starts a year before the actual event, with businesses applying to the competition online. Each applicant is put through a series of assessments that examine their business plans, potential for impact, risks, and opportunities for investment. While some businesses are well-established and looking to expand, others are looking for their initial seed money.

No matter the size of their business, each of the top 40 entrepreneurs is paired with an impact advisor and an investment advisor who offer feedback on both the science and the business sense of their model. The contestants span the broad and diverse seafood supply chain, with offerings ranging from an oyster co-op in Florida looking for investors to help fund construction of a hatchery, to Seafood IQ, an Icelandic company that uses radio frequency identification (RFID) labels so consumers can be sure they know where their fish is coming from.

Seafood provides a unique challenge because the industry is global, fractured, and full of middlemen. Salmon, for example, may be caught in Alaska, processed in China, and then shipped back to the U.S. for sale. As with other meats, itโ€™s often difficult to tell where seafood is coming from or whether itโ€™s sustainable. And the problem is getting more pronounced as global demand increases. In 2016, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) found that global per capita fish consumption had hit more than 44 pounds a year, an all-time high.

Earlier this year the World Bank reported that, โ€œabout 90 percent of marine fisheries monitored by the FAO are fully fished or overfished, up from about 75 percent in 2005.โ€ In addition to increased consumption, the report also points to the fact that โ€œfish stocks are also under pressure from pollution, coastal development, and the impacts of climate change.โ€

Rather than focusing on improving consumer education or tightening governmental regulations, Fish 2.0 hopes to protect the oceans by showing sustainability makes good business sense. Because the seafood industry relies on natural resources, Jain believes that sustainable ventures, which are able to preserve those resources for years to come, are more โ€œlikely to do better in the long run.โ€ Sustainable, she says, is simply โ€œbetter business.โ€

Tim Fitzgerald of the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF)โ€”and a judge at this yearโ€™s Fish 2.0 contestโ€”agrees that this investment is vital to the long-term health of the oceans. โ€œTo have large-scale change, you have to engage business,โ€ he says.

Read the full story at Civil Eats

 

For sustainable fisheries, try eating โ€˜underlovedโ€™ fish

January 4, 2018 โ€” Eating a wider variety of fish, including species like hake, skate, and cusk, would help keep overall fish stocks strong, according to chef and author Barton Seaver. Diversifying in this way would help ensure that people can keep eating plenty of fishโ€”an important source of nutrientsโ€”as well as ensure economic stability for fishermen and coastal communities.

In a December 18, 2017 interview with Terry Gross on NPRโ€™s Fresh Air, Barton, director of the Sustainable Seafood and Health Initiative at the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, discussed sustainable fishing and other fish-related topics, such as fish farming and tips for buying quality fish.

Seaver said that just three speciesโ€”tuna, salmon, and shrimpโ€”account for 65% of total fish consumption. But overexploitation can decimate species, he said. For example, a boom in popularity of sea bass that began in the 1990s led to overfishing and depleted stocks.

Read the full story at the Harvard School of Public Health

 

The Maine Lobster Industry Celebrates National Lobster Day on September 25, 2016

September 23, 2016 โ€” The following was released by the Maine Lobster Marketing Collective:

PORTLAND, Maine โ€” For the second year in a row, the Maine Lobster industry will celebrate its positive economic and cultural impact both in Maine and in the U.S. during National Lobster Day on September 25, 2016. Designated through a resolution by Senators Angus King and Susan Collins of Maine, National Lobster Day reinforces the hard work, sustainable practices and passion of Maineโ€™s 5,600 independent lobstermen and women.

โ€œThe lobster industry is not only an iconic part of Maineโ€™s image, but itโ€™s also a significant engine in our local economy that supports families up and down our coast,โ€ said Senators Collins and King in a joint statement. โ€œBy designating September 25 as National Lobster Day, the Senate has once again recognized lobsterโ€™s tremendous value for our communities while honoring the hardworking people in the industry. The thousands of Mainers who haul lobster from our shores, process it and distribute it ensure that this delicious Maine product can be enjoyed across the country and around the world. Lobster is a livelihood and a way of life for many Maine people, and we will always work to make sure this proud industry can continue its positive impact for generations to come.โ€

Last year, the Maine Lobster industry landed more than 120 million pounds for the fourth year in a row thanks to the self-governing, unparalleled sustainable practices that the industry has had in place for 150 years. Landings increase during peak season, typically June through November, allowing for nearly $1 billion in revenue to support citizens throughout Maine, and the tender sweet flavor of Maine Lobster to be shared with diners across the country.

โ€œWe are thrilled that the Senate has recognized the Maine Lobster industry by deeming September 25 as National Lobster Day again this year,โ€ said Matt Jacobson, the Executive Director of the Maine Lobster Marketing Collaborative (MLMC). โ€œWeโ€™re excited to have the national spotlight on our industry, especially during peak season, and we thank Senators King and Collins again for their support with this resolution.โ€

To further promote Maine Lobster and its rich heritage, the MLMC focuses on sharing the Maine Lobster story with national media, educating chefs about Maine Lobsterโ€™s diverse culinary applications to help them reimagine it as a key ingredient and connecting lobster lovers through social and digital platforms. Additionally, this year, the Collaborative released a video series that showcases the uniqueness of Maine Lobster and the industryโ€™s impact across Maine.

โ€œMaine Lobsterโ€™s strong sustainability story, beautiful flavor and versatility make chefs proud to serve it,โ€ said Barton Seaver, chef, cookbook author and sustainable seafood expert. โ€œNational Lobster Day highlights these great qualities and the many people throughout the industry who bring Maine Lobster to our plates.โ€

Got questions about sustainable seafood? He has answers.

July 12, 2016 โ€” For Barton Seaver, improving seafood sustainability begins by starting conversations. The chef turned author and sustainability advocate spends his time making connections between academics and business people, producers and consumers, sustainability and health. With his new cookbook, โ€œTwo If by Sea,โ€ he has also created recipes that help people understand their options when it comes to eating sustainable seafood.

In the cookbook, Seaver seeks to make seafood approachable by identifying more than 70 varieties of fish โ€” some familiar, some less familiar. He looks at seafood by flavor profile and identifies cooking techniques including poaching, pan-roasting, brining, and smoking that work best for different varieties.

Seaver, who was named chef of the year by Esquire in 2009, left his Washington restaurants for South Freeport, Maine, in 2010 to be closer to a working waterfront and the fisheries he is looking to sustain. He is now director of the Sustainable Seafood and Health Initiative at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and is a fellow with the National Geographic Society. In his Harvard role, he often works with businesses to make connections between their sustainability and employee wellness initiatives. โ€œOne of the things about sustainability is that when we choose to buy products, thereโ€™s another equal and opposite action. That is, we are not buying another product. If I put salmon on my dinner plate tonight, Iโ€™m not putting beef on,โ€ he says.

Read the full story at The Boston Globe

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