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The information age is starting to transform fishing worldwide

April 14, 2022 โ€” People in the worldโ€™s developed nations live in a post-industrial era, working mainly in service or knowledge industries. Manufacturers increasingly rely on sensors, robots, artificial intelligence and machine learning to replace human labor or make it more efficient. Farmers can monitor crop health via satellite and apply pesticides and fertilizers with drones.

Commercial fishing, one of the oldest industries in the world, is a stark exception. Industrial fishing, with factory ships and deep-sea trawlers that land thousands of tons of fish at a time, are still the dominant hunting mode in much of the world.

Fishing with data

Changes in behavior, technology and policy are occurring throughout the fishing industry. Here are some examples:

  • Global Fishing Watch, an international nonprofit, monitors and creates open-access visualizations of global fishing activity on the internet with a 72-hour delay. This transparency breakthrough has led to the arrest and conviction of owners and captains of boats fishing illegally.
  • The Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability, an international business-to-business initiative, creates voluntary industry standards for seafood traceability. These standards are designed to help harmonize various systems that track seafood through the supply chain, so they all collect the same key information and rely on the same data sources. This information lets buyers know where their seafood comes from and whether it was produced sustainably.
  • Fishing boats in New Bedford, Massachusetts โ€“ the top U.S. fishing port, based on total catch value โ€“ are rigged with sensors to develop a Marine Data Bank that will give fishermen data on ocean temperature, salinity and oxygen levels. Linking this data to actual stock behavior and catch levels is expected to help fishermen target certain species and avoid unintentional bycatch.

The oceanโ€™s restorative power

There is no shortage of gloomy information about how overfishing, along with other stresses like climate change, is affecting the worldโ€™s oceans. Nonetheless, I believe it bears emphasizing that over 78% of current marine fish landings come from biologically sustainable stocks, according to the United Nations. And overharvested fisheries often can rebound with smart management.

For example, the U.S. east coast scallop fishery, which was essentially defunct in the mid-1990s, is now a sustainable US$570 million a year industry.

Read the full story at The Conversation

Planet Tracker: Inflationary economy provides incentives to adopt traceability systems

February 3, 2022 โ€” High inflation and low-cost credit are providing an โ€œappealing windowโ€ for seafood firms to integrate a traceability system into their operations, according to a new Planet Tracker report.

The nonprofitโ€™s new research paper, โ€œImplementing Traceability: Seeing Through Excuses,โ€ said companies โ€œwho have to borrow to fund a traceability system will know that corporate debt rates remain low.โ€

Read the full story at SeafoodSource

 

Seafood industry pilot study reinforces importance of standards to traceable, responsible supply chains

June 24, 2021 โ€” A recent seafood industry traceability pilot study conducted by GS1 US supports the value of universal standards to help seafood companies efficiently and effectively exchange supply chain data and improve end-to-end visibility.

The study was conducted in collaboration with the Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability (GDST), the Institute of Food Technologists (IFT), Beaver Street Fisheries, Bumble Bee Seafoods, Chicken of the Sea, FoodLogiQ, IBM Food Trust, Insite Solutions/Norpac, ripe.io, SAP, Walmart, and Wholechain. It follows a similar 2020 prototype that confirmed traceability solutions from FoodLogiQ, IBM Food Trust, ripe.io and SAP can operate, transmit, and exchange product data throughout a supply chain when GS1 Standards are applied.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Over 150 companies endorse statement calling for increased seafood traceability

February 15, 2021 โ€” Leading seafood companies across the globe โ€“ and the supply chain โ€“ have come together to issue a statement urging the rest of the industry and governments to take action on illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing.

The statement, organized by five major industry collaborations, calls on the seafood industry to adopt the Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability (GDST) standard, and for governments to ratify the Port State Measures Agreement (PSMA).

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Groundbreaking new global traceability standards met with rapid industry support

November 4, 2020 โ€” Traceable and reliable seafood is crucial in helping businesses and stakeholders across the seafood sector retain their competitive edge in todayโ€™s industry. Companies participating in the Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability (GDST) โ€“ and the committee of seafood stakeholders steering it โ€“ know this well.

Launched in April 2017, GDST was established as a business-to-business forum with the core mandate of crafting a set of industry-wide traceability standards for seafood that would both enable interoperability as well as increase verifiability of products across sector systems.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

For signatories to Tuna 2020 Traceability Declaration, progress is tangible

March 19, 2020 โ€” Seafood companies across the tuna supply chain are making strides toward meeting the four commitments that are part of the Tuna 2020 Traceability Declaration.

The Global Tuna Alliance โ€“ a consortium of companies seeking to improve the tuna supply chain โ€“ surveyed the 66 companies that signed the declaration in 2017 to assess their progress, compiling the results in a report to be released soon. About two-thirds of companies responded.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

First version of comprehensive data standards for seafood traceability released

March 17, 2020 โ€” Dozens of methods of documenting seafood traceability โ€“ and hundreds of individual systems โ€“  have emerged in recent years as companies across the seafood supply chain and the technology vendors that serve them seek to demonstrate the sustainable, legal origins of their products.

Rarely can those systems seamlessly interact with each other or share data, a gap that poses an ever-larger problem as regulators draft new traceability laws and consumers demand more information about the origin of their food.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability readies to launch GDST 1.0 at SENA 2020

February 14, 2020 โ€” Citing the importance of seafood as a global source of protein, increasing regulation, and creating greater efficiency in trade, the Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability (GDST) has developed a set of basic technical standards to allow for interoperability across seafood traceability platforms. The effort is intended to make global seafood traceability more reliable and more affordable for companies throughout the supply chain.

Because seafood is the most globalized sector of all food supply chains, it has an increased set of challenges โ€“ not just related to the complexity of its supply chains, but the broad array of sustainability obstacles across multiple geographies including labor issues, under-resourced management, and illegal fishing.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Hackathons seek to create tech solutions for seafood traceability challenges

October 25, 2019 โ€” A pair of hackathons โ€” with EUR 10,000 (USD 11,100) worth of prizes on the line โ€” aim to improve seafood traceability by developing new technological solutions, including by leveraging blockchain.

The hackathons โ€“ one held in Cologne, Germany on 21 to 22 October and the other being held in Bali, Indonesia from 26 to 27 October โ€“ are being put on by the Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability (GDST). For the Cologne hackathon, GDST teamed up with fTRACE and GS1 Germany. For the Bali event, GDST is partnering with SecondMuse and USAID Oceans and Fisheries Partnership.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Recent Headlines

  • US senator warns of warming, plastic threats to worldโ€™s oceans and fisheries
  • Younger consumers demanding more sustainable seafood products, European Commission data finds
  • Seafood companies are scrambling to move production, secure new supply chains in response to tariffs
  • Trump Faces Challenge to Offshore Wind Directive
  • Trump to allow commercial fishing in New England marine monument
  • California and 17 other states sue Trump administration over wind energy projects
  • Alaska Sen. Sullivan pushes U.S. government to complete key stock surveys, fight illegal fishing amid possible NOAA funding cuts
  • Horseshoe Crab Board Approves Addendum IX Addendum Allows Multi-Year Specifications for Male-Only Harvest

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