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GSSI Public Consultation on the ASC Shrimp Standard Scope Extension

October 23, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative:

On 23 October 2019, GSSI launched a 30-day public consultation on the Interim GSSI Benchmark Report for the Aquaculture Stewardship Council (ASC) Shrimp Standard Scope Extension.

In early 2019, the ASC applied to extend the scope of its GSSI recognition to include its Shrimp Standard, having already obtained recognition for the scope of its Salmon Standard in August 2018.

The Independent Experts and the Benchmark Committee found the ASC Shrimp Standard V1.0 โ€“ March 2014 to be in alignment with all the GSSI Essential Components for Section C (Aquaculture). The Independent Experts and the Benchmark Committee also confirmed the Governance (Section A) and Operational Procedures (Section B) have been appropriately applied to the ASC Shrimp Standard V1.0 โ€“ March 2014.

GSSI now invites comments from all stakeholders on the recommendation of the Benchmark Committee to include the ASC Shrimp Standard in the GSSI scope of recognition for the ASC.

Following the public consultation, the Benchmark Committee, Independent Experts and ASC will process the feedback received. GSSIโ€™s Benchmark Committee will then provide the GSSI Steering Board with a final recommendation on extending the scope of recognition. The Public Consultation feedback will be made publicly available after the GSSI Steering Boardโ€™s decision.

Read the full release here

GSSI Public Consultation on the Benchmark Report for the Marine Eco-Label Japan (MEL) Scheme

July 2, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative:

On 1 July 2019, GSSI launched a 30-day public consultation on the GSSI Benchmark Report for the Marine Eco-Label Japan (MEL) scheme.

Marine Eco-Label Japan (MEL) Council applied for GSSI recognition of its MEL scheme in September 2018 and has been benchmarked against the GSSI Global Benchmark Tool on Section A (Governance), Section B (Operational Management) Section C (Aquaculture) and D (Fisheries).

The Independent Experts and the Benchmark Committee found the scheme to be in alignment with all the GSSI Essential Components. GSSI now invites comments from all stakeholders on the recommendation of the Benchmark Committee to recognize the Marine Eco-Label Japan (MEL) scheme for their Aquaculture Management Standard (Version 1.0, 2018) and Fisheries Management Standard (Version 2.0, 2018).

Following the public consultation, the Benchmark Committee, Independent Experts and MEL will process the feedback received. GSSIโ€™s Benchmark Committee will then provide the GSSI Steering Board with a final recommendation on recognition. The Public Consultation feedback will be made publicly available after the GSSI Steering Boardโ€™s decision.

Read the full release here

Southwind Foods Joins GSSI

June 17, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative, Southwind Foods, and Great American Seafood Imports Co:

The Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative is pleased to announce that Southwind Foods has joined the GSSI Global Partnership as a Funding Partner.

Southwind Foods is a U.S. owned and operated seafood company servicing U.S. grocery, distributor and food service customers fresh and frozen seafood certified by GSSI recognized schemes BAP, ASC and MSC.

โ€œWe are excited to partner with GSSI and further our commitment to sustainable, socially responsible, safe and traceable seafood,โ€ said Paul Galletti, Co-Owner and EVP, Sales & Marketing. โ€œOur family owned, and operated company represents 4 generations that has made its living from commercial fishing to wholesale, processing, and distribution. We have witnessed first-hand how global seafood consumption has increased and it is crucial that we do our part to keep fish populations thriving and our seafood industry healthy for years to come.โ€

ABOUT SOUTHWIND FOODS

Southwind Foods is a U.S. owned and operated company supplying our grocery, distributor and food service customers the finest fresh and frozen responsibly harvested seafood from around the world.

Our corporate office and world-class 160,000 square feet BRC Global Standard, HACCP approved processing, storage, and distribution facility is located in Carson, California. We also operate sales offices in New York, Texas, and Arizona along with processing and distribution facilities in Salt Lake City, Utah, and Las Vegas, Nevada that supports our sales and distribution in all 50 states.

Southwind Foods import division, Great American Seafood Imports Co., was established in 2003 and operates as the companyโ€™s overseas procurement division. The brand consists of a diverse line of cooked, raw, and breaded, bulk and packaged shrimp, fillets, steaks, portions, whole fish, crab, shellfish, and aquatics along with value added and innovative products such as meal kits, planks, skewers, poke and more.

Our highly skilled and ethical marketing and procurement associates work closely with our customers and suppliers to supply the highest level of quality, service and value.

To learn more, please visit www.southwindfoods.com.

THE GSSI GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP

The Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative (GSSI) is a global, Public-Private Partnership, working towards more sustainable seafood for everyone. For more information on our Global Partnership and how to become a partner, please visit our website or contact us: secretariat@ourgssi.org.

Seattle Shrimp & Seafood Company Joins GSSI

March 26, 2019 โ€” The following was released by the Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative and Seattle Shrimp & Seafood:

The Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative is pleased to announce that Seattle Shrimp & Seafood Company has joined the GSSI Global Partnership as a Funding Partner.

Seattle Shrimp & Seafood Company is a global supplier of shrimp and shellfish. Seattle Shrimp & Seafood Company works with GSSI recognized schemes BAP and MSC.

โ€œSeattle Shrimp & Seafood Company is proud to be partnering with the Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative and its supporters as an acting member and Funding Partner. We are extremely excited for the opportunity to collaborate with organizations from industry and NGO sectors that are committed to the long-term preservation, sustainability and growth of global fisheries,โ€ said Atsushige Amano, President of Seattle Shrimp & Seafood.

BJโ€™s Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc. Joins GSSI

March 19, 2019 โ€” The following was released by Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative and BJโ€™s Wholesale:

The Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative is pleased to announce that BJโ€™s Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc. (BJโ€™s) has joined the GSSI Global Partnership as a Funding Partner.

BJโ€™s Wholesale Club is a leading operator of membership warehouse clubs in the Eastern United States. By joining GSSIโ€™s Global Partnership, BJโ€™s joins more than 90 stakeholders industry-wide in addressing the seafood sectorโ€™s sustainability challenges.

โ€œBJโ€™s Wholesale Club is committed to providing sustainably sourced seafood to our members,โ€ said Scott Williams, Vice President, Own Brands and Quality at BJโ€™s Wholesale Club. โ€œWeโ€™re excited to join The Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative to deepen our commitment to responsible sourcing and helping the industry find solutions.โ€

GSSI working to benchmark social compliance; welcomes new members

May 18, 2018 โ€” The Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative (GSSI) is collaborating with the Consumer Goods Forumโ€™s Sustainable Supply Chain Initiative in order to create a benchmark and recognition tool for social compliance schemes in the global seafood sector.

The Sustainable Supply Chain Initiative (SSCI) provides auditing and certification of sustainability criteria, with a focus on social issues. It is operated by the Consumer Goods Forum, an industry network encouraging the global adoption of practices and standards for the production of consumer goods.

โ€œWe are thrilled to be collaborating with the CGFโ€™s Sustainable Supply Chain Initiative on such an important initiative for the industry. Addressing social compliance has long been on the horizon for GSSI and to do this now with the CGF will deliver great value to the seafood industry,โ€ GSSI Managing Director Herman Wisse said. โ€œUtilizing GSSIโ€™s global partnership to support the development of the SSCI Benchmark Tool for social compliance schemes brings us one step closer to our vision of more sustainable seafood for everyone.โ€

Read the full story at Seafood Source

 

Marine Stewardship Council Celebrates 20 Years of Keeping Oceans Wild

March 6, 2018 โ€” SEATTLE โ€” The following was released by the Marine Stewardship Council:

The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), the worldโ€™s most recognized, science-based seafood certification program, marks 20 years of working to keep the worldโ€™s oceans wild with a new campaign. โ€œKeep It Wildโ€ celebrates the people who love wild seafood and who have been instrumental in partnering with the MSC to protect the worldโ€™s oceans over the past two decades. The MSC has launched a new website โ€“ 20.msc.org โ€“ to better highlight its work and mission and to encourage consumers to continue choosing seafood with the organizationโ€™s blue fish label that denotes wild, certified and sustainable seafood.

โ€œSince the MSCโ€™s establishment in late 1997, we have engaged numerous stakeholders โ€“ from fisheries and processors to restaurants, retailers and consumers โ€“ in our vision to see the worldโ€™s oceans teeming with life to ensure a healthy seafood supply for today, tomorrow and always,โ€ said Brian Perkins, regional director for the Americas at the Marine Stewardship Council. โ€œAs we embark on the next 20 years, and beyond, we want to celebrate those who have turned that vision into a reality. While much work remains, we are proud of our collective accomplishments thus far and look forward to continuing our momentum.โ€

A mission translates into milestones

Conceived in response to global fisheries challenges such as overfishing and habitat destruction, the MSC was established as a nonprofit by Unilever and WWF to contribute to the health of the worldโ€™s oceans. The MSC uses its blue fish label and strict fishery certification standards to support its mission in three ways: recognizing and rewarding sustainable fishing practices, influencing the choices people make when buying seafood, and working with partners to transform the seafood market to a sustainable basis.

Since its inception, the MSC has created highly specialized certification standards and traceability systems, which are continually refined and updated with the latest fisheries science. Organizations that seek certification do so voluntarily, and independent third-party entities determine whether those organizations meet the MSCโ€™s stringent requirements before awarding certification. To meet the MSCโ€™s standards, applicants must demonstrate alignment with three core principles: guaranteeing sustainability of fish populations, committing to minimal ecosystem impacts, and implementing effective management practices that respond to environmental changes.

The MSCโ€™s rigorous approach has attracted stakeholders from around the world โ€“ including fisheries, processors, restaurants, retailers and consumers โ€“ in its efforts to achieve significant milestones in sustainability:

  • 12 percent of all global catch is now certified to MSC standards
  • 300 fisheries are certified globally, and 22 of those are in the U.S.
  • More than 33,000 companies around the world, representing every level of the supply chain, are MSC certified
  • More than 23,000 products carry the MSCโ€™s blue fish label in about 100 markets
  • The U.S. market has more than 1,000 products with the blue fish label

Keeping the worldโ€™s oceans teeming with life is a collaborative effort, and the MSC has reached out not only to fisheries, but to businesses with global impacts. For instance, in 2006, Walmart committed to sourcing all fresh and frozen seafood from organizations certified to the MSC standard. In 2011, McDonaldโ€™s restaurants in Europe adopted blue fish labeled products, and the following years saw a similar movement by its U.S. and Canadian operations. In 2015, IKEA pledged to serve only sustainable seafood throughout its markets.

The MSC has also earned the respect of sustainability-focused organizations around the world. It was the first global seafood certification to achieve recognition from the Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative for its credibility and rigor. Additionally, the MSC was recognized for best practices by ISEAL Alliance and UN Food and Agriculture Organization.

MSC maintains focus to โ€˜Keep It Wildโ€™


As the MSC looks to the future, it is working to fold more individuals and organizations into its mission. With a new Keep It Wild campaign, the nonprofit is celebrating the people โ€“ known as โ€œthe Wild Onesโ€ โ€“ who have turned their love of wild seafood into a solution for the worldโ€™s at-risk oceans. The campaign will highlight the fishers, processors, fish mongers, grocers, restaurateurs, chefs, consumers and even pets who enjoy seafood carrying the blue fish label, which is affixed to products ranging from fresh, frozen, canned and preserved items to supplements and pet food.

The Keep It Wild campaign will be featured online at 20.msc.org, in retailers, on the Food Networkโ€™s โ€œFood Questโ€ show, and at the Environmental Film Festival in Washington, D.C. In addition to celebrating the people behind the organizationโ€™s success, Keep It Wild will provide consumers with guidance on how to find and select sustainable and traceable seafood products so they can do their part in keeping the oceans wild for generations to come.

Read the release here.

 

Walmart recognizes suppliersโ€™ efforts at sustainability-focused meeting

February 7, 2018 โ€” To help Walmart continue expanding its sustainable seafood supply, the largest global retailer recently met with several large United States seafood suppliers, along with sustainability certifiers and other groups.

The retailer, which operates more than 5,400 Walmart and Samโ€™s Club stores in the U.S., also recognized three suppliers at the 1 February โ€œSustainability Summitโ€ at Walmartโ€™s headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas.

Munhall, Pennsylvania-based The Fishinโ€™ Company was recognized for partnering with Walmart to source its first four-star BAP certified tilapia, Mark Eastham, Walmartโ€™s senior manager for sustainability, told SeafoodSource.

Meanwhile, Jacksonville, Florida-based wholesaler Beaver Street Fisheries was recognized for โ€œits work with Walmart to support a more sustainable shrimp supply chain,โ€ Eastham said.

Frozen seafood supplier North Atlantic Inc., based in Portland, Maine, was recognized for its engagement in Fishery Improvement Projects across the globe.

โ€œThey were also the first supplier to sign up for the Ocean Disclosure Project,โ€ Eastham said. North Atlantic also operates Bali Seafood International, which is building a commercially sponsored fishery management model for small-boat fisheries in Indonesia.

Around 75 suppliers in total attended the sustainability summit, along with representatives of the Global Aquaculture Allianceโ€™s Best Aquaculture Practices program, the Marine Stewardship Council, the Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute, the Aquaculture Stewardship Council, and the Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative.

โ€œThis forum provides us with the opportunity to reflect on what we have accomplished and what we can do to accelerate progress toward sustainability โ€“ so that we can enjoy not only a vibrant seafood industry but vibrant oceans,โ€ Eastham said.

By 2025, Walmart will expand and enhance sustainable sourcing to cover 20 key commodities.

โ€œThis is an important issue for Walmart, as seafood is one of the commodities we have pledged to be a part of our long-term sustainability commitments,โ€ Eastham said.

Walmart is working with sustainable seafood suppliers that share the retailerโ€™s commitment to providing sustainable seafood to its customers, he said.

โ€œOur goal is to build transparency and continuous improvement with the seafood supply chain, so that we can build confidence and provide for our customers now and in the future,โ€ Eastham said.

At the meeting, Walmart executives highlighted the retailerโ€™s progress in sourcing sustainable seafood to date and discussed the companyโ€™s future goals. Eastman said by 2025, โ€œbased on certain factors including price and demand,โ€ Walmart U.S., Samโ€™s Club, and Walmart Canada will require all canned light and white tuna suppliers to source from fisheries that are either third-party certified or engaged in fishery improvement projects (FIPs). The company has also committed to carrying FAD-free and pole and line canned tuna in its U.S., Canadian, and ASDA-brand stores, Eastham said.

Read the full story at SeafoodSource

 

Tuna Traceability Declaration 2020 seeks traceability, social commitments from tuna industry

June 2, 2017 โ€” A new โ€œTuna Traceability Declarationโ€ is seeking to encourage the tuna industry to improve sustainability and social conditions in the tuna-fishing industry.

The Tuna 2020 Traceability Declaration was created in advance of United Nations Ocean Conference, taking place 5 to 9 June in New York City. The declaration is not legally binding, but is meant to encourage actions and partnerships from and between tuna harvesters, processors, retailers, traders and related nonprofits and concerned governments, to improve the health of tuna populations worldwide. The initiative is in response to the U.N.โ€™s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for the conservation and sustainable use of oceans, seas and marine resources.

The declaration is being promoted by the nonprofit World Economic Forum, which brings together global leaders from diverse backgrounds, including business and government to aid the organizationโ€™s mission of being โ€œcommitted to improving the state of the world.โ€

According to the World Economic Forum, The declaration requires the following commitments from its signees:

  1. Tuna traceability commitment
    1. Pledge that all tuna products in our supply chains will be fully traceable to the vessel and trip dates, and that this information will be disclosed upon request at the point of sale either on the packaging or via an online system.
  2. Commitment to a socially responsible tuna supply chain
    1. Pledge to eliminate any form of slavery and ensure suppliers at least meet minimum social standards in management practices as recommended in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Labour Organizationโ€™s conventions and recommendations.
  3. Commitment to environmentally responsible tuna sources
    1. Pledge to source from tuna fisheries that have implemented: a) Robust science-based management plans, including harvest strategies that can maintain stocks at, or restore them at least to, levels which can produce maximum sustainable yield; and b) Measures to ensure that impacts of fisheries on the environment are sustainable, including bycatch mitigation techniques.
    2. Put this pledge into effect by continuing to explore new opportunities to support the multi-stakeholder initiatives mentioned above, and work to continually increase sourcing from tuna fisheries certified by schemes that are internationally recognized by the Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative (GSSI).

Read the full story at Seafood Source

MSC achieves GSSI recognition

March 15, 2017 โ€” The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) has become the first global sustainable seafood certification program to achieve recognition from the Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative (GSSI).

The MSCโ€™s blue check eco-label is used to designate wild-caught seafood as sustainable. The MSC, which was founded in 1997 by the World Wildlife Fund and Unilever, lists its main objectives as promoting best practices in fishing, creating market incentives to reward sustainable fishing practices, and providing a framework and pathway for fishery improvement.

The GSSI, launched in October 2015 with support from numerous companies involved in the global seafood trade, seeks to โ€œprovide clarity of seafood certification worldwide through a multi-component review that is based upon the Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries and the FAO Guidelines for seafood certification and eco-labeling.โ€

โ€œRecognition from GSSI reaffirms the rigor and credibility of MSC certification. Anyone committing to purchase MSC certified seafood can be confident that it reflects global best practice in fisheries management,โ€ MSC CEO Rupert Howes said in announcement.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

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