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MASSACHUSETTS: โ€˜Dock to dishโ€™ aids net zero plan

November 11, 2020 โ€” There is a simple way to help combat climate change, and it tastes good: Eat local fish.

More than 90 percent of the fish consumed in this country comes from overseas, creating an enormous carbon footprint.

โ€œThe average seafood eaten in the United States travels 5,500 miles from dock to dish,โ€ said Brett Tolley, adding that even in coastal communities, the numbers arenโ€™t that different. โ€œIf that doesnโ€™t wake you up, I donโ€™t know what will.โ€

Tolley, national program coordinator for Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance, was one of four fishing industry panelists participating in Net Zero, a virtual conference sponsored by the Cape Cod Climate Change Collaborative.

The conference in late October brought together public and private leaders in all sectors, from construction to creative arts, who are growing jobs and the economy while moving the region to โ€œnet zero,โ€ meaning the amount of greenhouse gas produced and the amount removed from the atmosphere is a wash.

Read the full story at Wicked Local

New England Fishermen Worry About Trade Dispute With China

June 18, 2018 โ€” New England fishermen could be caught in the middle of the escalating trade dispute between the United States and China.

In response to Trump administration tariff threats, China is planning its own 25 percent tariff on more than 500 U.S. products, including seafood.

Latest numbers from the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries put the value of seafood caught in Massachusetts in 2016 at $551 million.

But Chathamโ€™s Doug Feeney says small boat fishermen like him are already hurting. Heโ€™s been traveling to China to try to expand his market.

Read the full story at WBUR

Is Dogfish the New Cod in New England?

August 15, 2016 โ€” On a wind-tossed autumn morning off the Cape Cod coast, the aft deck of Doug Feeneyโ€™s 36-foot fishing boat, the Noah, is buried beneath a squirming, slimy, shin-deep layer of sharks.

The Noahโ€™s hauler growls under the weight of the 300-hook long line emerging from the froth-tipped Atlantic. The reek of gasoline mingles with salt. A procession of small gray sharks, each pierced neatly through the jaw by a steel hook, materializes from the depths. Feeney, a lean fisherman whose goatee and hoop earrings lend him a vaguely piratical mien, yanks the sharks from the line with the steady rhythm of an assembly-line worker. A drained cup of coffee perches on the dashboard; James Taylor warbles on the radio.

โ€œTwenty-five years ago weโ€™d catch 10,000 pounds of these things every day,โ€ Feeney shouts over the roar of the engines and โ€œFire and Rain.โ€ โ€œWeโ€™d just throw โ€™em back over the side.โ€

Like many Chatham fishermen, Feeney is a jack-of-all-trades. He gillnets monkfish in early spring, he trolls for bluefin tuna in late fall. But no species occupies more of his energy than the spiny dogfish, the dachshund-size shark now piling up on the Noahโ€™s deck. Though the word โ€œsharkโ€ conjures visions of the toothsome great white, spiny dogfish, the most common shark in the world, bears little resemblance to Jaws. For starters, it rarely grows more than 4 feet long. White freckles dot its slate-colored back and its green eyes glow with an eerie feline light. Stroked head to tail, its skin is almost velvety to the touch.

What Squalus acanthias lacks in fierceness, it makes up for in abundance. From Florida to Maine, populations are flourishing, so much so that the annual quotaโ€”the total weight that fishermen are allowed to catchโ€”has increased every year from 2008 to 2015, cresting at a whopping 50 million pounds before dipping to 40 million this year. Such bounty stands in stark contrast to the grim status of Massachusettsโ€™ most iconic fish, the cod, so depleted that quotas have sunk below a meager one million pounds. With the cod industry in a state of collapse, dogfish represent perhaps the best hope for struggling local fishermen. โ€œThese guys have been through so many cuts,โ€ says Tobey Curtis, a fisheries policy analyst with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). โ€œWhen we have success, we want to be able to pay them back.โ€

Read the full story at Boston Magazine

โ€œGood Catch!โ€ Campaign Bolsters New Englandโ€™s Sustainable Seafood Businesses

August 10, 2016 โ€” The following was released by the Marine Stewardship Council:

BOSTON โ€” According to new independent research, seafood consumers in New England are significantly more likely than national consumers to purchase fresh fish at a seafood counter, 58 percent and 40 percent, respectively. New England consumersโ€™ affinity for fresh seafood is renowned, and the region benefits from a concentration of certified sustainable fisheries, which work to protect fish stocks, ecosystems and local fishing communities. However, consumer awareness of the abundant sustainable seafood offerings from area sellers remains low. To address this, the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), an international non-profit dedicated to safeguarding the seafood supply, will launch a campaign to educate New England consumers about identifying sustainable seafood products.

MSC will take its โ€œGood Catch!โ€ campaign directly to consumers this month with events at Whole Foods and Big Y grocery stores, which feature MSC at their fresh fish counters, in greater Boston, Springfield and Great Barrington, as well as at Green Fest and the Quincy Farmers Market.

โ€œAs consumers are developing greater awareness of their impact on the world, they are demanding more ways to validate that the products they buy support their values,โ€ said Brian Perkins, MSC Regional Director โ€“ Americas. โ€œYou should have confidence that what you are buying really is what it says it is and that it originates from a sustainable source. The blue MSC label ensures that the seafood was caught wild, using methods that donโ€™t deplete the natural supply or come at the expense of other ocean life.โ€

IMPACT ON LOCAL FISHING INDUSTRY: The fishing industry โ€“ at the heart of many New England communities โ€“ has seen first-hand the consequences of unsustainable fishing. Sustainable fisheries in New England, and globally, are the most important players in addressing these problems. The MSC certification program helps these fishing communities prove to the marketplace that their seafood supplies are healthy. In New England, the US Atlantic sea scallop; Maine Lobster; US North Atlantic swordfish; US Atlantic spiny dogfish; US Acadian, redfish, pollock and haddock fisheries are MSC certified.

โ€œThe fishing industry is vital to New Englandโ€™s economy, and operating them sustainably ensures that our industry will continue for generations to come,โ€ said Doug Feeney a commercial fisherman and member of the Cape Cod Fishermanโ€™s Association. โ€œConsumers want to know that the seafood they buy is responsibly sourced โ€“ MSC certification allows us to let local shoppers know that what theyโ€™re buying really does come from our sustainable sources.โ€

Consumers wishing to learn more about sustainable seafood can look for the MSC booth throughout August outside Whole Foods stores in the Boston area, Big Y stores in Springfield and Great Barrington, Green Fest, and the Quincy Farmers Market. Visit msc.org/goodcatch for information.

โ€œBy purchasing seafood that they know comes from a sustainable source, consumers help protect our oceans and ensure that seafood can be enjoyed for many generations to come,โ€ said Perkins. โ€œThey have the power to impact the health of the ocean and the continuation of the fishing industry simply by the products they choose.โ€

About the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC): The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) is an international non-profit organization. Our vision is for the worldโ€™s oceans to be teeming with life, and seafood supplies safeguarded for this and future generations. Our ecolabel and certification program recognizes and rewards sustainable fishing practices and is helping create a more sustainable seafood market. The MSC ecolabel on a seafood product means that it comes from a wild-catch fishery which has been independently certified to the MSCโ€™s science-based standard for environmentally sustainable fishing, and itโ€™s fully traceable to a sustainable source. More than 280 fisheries in over 35 countries are certified to the MSCโ€™s Standard. These fisheries have a combined annual seafood production of almost nine million metric tons, representing close to 10% of annual global yields. More than 20,000 seafood products worldwide carry the MSC ecolabel. For more information, visit www.msc.org.

When it comes to โ€˜trash fish,โ€™ whatโ€™s in a name?

December 9, 2015 โ€” โ€œTrash Fish.โ€ Would you eat it?

Itโ€™s a two-word buzz-inducing phrase that covers all the oceanโ€™s under-loved varieties: the hake and redfish and dogfish of the world that are plentiful off New Englandโ€™s coasts, yet so often ignored in this region.

The many Boston-area experts who spoke with Metro agree: for a sustainable fishery future, area diners need to broaden their palates and eat more than just the staples like haddock and cod. But is โ€œtrash fishโ€ the title these oceanic underdogs need to make it to the mainstream?

โ€œWe wanted it to be provocative,โ€ said Alisha Fowler of the Cambridge-based   Chefs Collaborative, which hosts โ€œtrash fish dinnersโ€ to promote the lesser-known breeds. โ€œWeโ€™re not trying to say theyโ€™re like trash, or unworthy. But just the fact that theyโ€™re cast aside and treated like theyโ€™re not worthy.โ€

Provocative it has been. Since 2013, itโ€™s caught the attention of the culinary community around the country. More than 50 chefs have led โ€œtrash fish dinnersโ€ of their own, she said. In April, the Collaborative plans to host a food summit in New York for an estimated 350 cooks, which she said will focus in part on the subject.

Read the full story from Metro

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