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โ€œItโ€™s all Netflixโ€™s fault!โ€ โ€“ opposition to octopus farming grows in wake of popular documentary

April 16, 2023 โ€” After decades of research, closed-cycle octopus farming is close to becoming a reality. But it faces an existential threat from increasingly well-organized activist groups opposed to the farming of a creature believed by some scientists to possess higher-than-average intelligence and emotional capacity.

The most high-profile octopus farm in the works is Nueva Pescanovaโ€™s EUR 65 million (USD 74 million ) 4,000-square-meter Pescanova Biomarine Center facility in Puerto Las Palmas, on the island of Gran Canaria, in Spainโ€™s Canary Islands, which will have the capacity to produce 3,000 metric tons of octopus annually.

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

Seaspiracy fueling plant-based surge in Europe, as Cargill becomes next big player to invest in seafood analog market

April 28, 2021 โ€” Plant-based seafood analog products continue to gain in popularity in Europe. To meet that demand, suppliers have been launching new plant-based products, while companies traditionally aligned with the seafood industry have been investing in plant-based firms.

Agriculture giant Cargill is investing in Bflike, a start-up created by BOX NV. Bflike has patent-pending vegan fat and blood platforms, and it plans to license its proprietary technology and premix ingredient solutions to food manufacturers and retailers so they can commercialize their own meat and fish alternative products.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Seaspiracyโ€™s lasting impact on sustainable seafood businesses

April 21, 2021 โ€” With each passing day, Seaspiracy becomes increasingly irrelevant, buried in the never-ending content cue of the worldโ€™s largest streaming platform. The last month has been full of fact checks, flame wars, and funding accusations. Though it brought out the worst of everyone on social media, it brought the marine science and stakeholder community together. There is a clear consensus that the film was awful. Even Ray Hilborn and Daniel Pauly agree!

I sneer at the filmmakerโ€™s silly โ€œfact page,โ€ a regurgitation of each false claim in the film listed in chronological order.  But I acknowledgeโ€”the jokeโ€™s on us. The filmmakers had no intention of presenting facts or having an honest discussion about ocean health; they sought to create a piece of horror entertainment by slandering the seafood industry. And they succeeded. For those of us in the sustainable seafood world, the cut is deep and unlikely to heal soon.

Sustainable seafood businesses didnโ€™t deserve this. Those referring to the best available science, making public sourcing policies, exercising due diligence in their supply chains, and seeking certifications are disproportionately impacted. The film concluded that there is no such thing as sustainable seafood, making liars and cheats of those seeking it. A seafood company that makes no sustainability claims is now less likely to receive negative feedback than one that does.

Herein lies the most disgusting part of this film: it disincentivizes sustainability. Sustainable seafood products are often more expensive than unsustainable alternatives, and studies suggest consumers are not willing to pay a premium for environmentally sustainable seafood. Attempting to source seafood sustainably costs time, money, and perseverance. Like brushing your teeth, you canโ€™t just do it once and be considered clean. A diligent seafood sustainability program requires regular re-assessments and constant attention, or else plaque will accumulate. Commitment to sustainability prohibits a fisherman from fishing in a marine protected area even though it might be full of valuable fish; it stops a chef from putting a popular item back on the menu; it requires a mid-size grocery store chain to invest valuable resources into a seafood certification program each year.

Read the full story at Sustainable Fisheries UW

What Netflixโ€™s Seaspiracy gets wrong about fishing, explained by a marine biologist

April 13, 2021 โ€” I wanted to like Seaspiracy, the recent Netflix documentary that has lots of people talking about the damage that industrial fisheries inflict on the oceans and our souls. Since premiering on March 24, the movie has made its way onto (and off) Netflixโ€™s Top 10 watch lists in a number of countries, and everyone from Tom Brady to Wells Fargo analysts have weighed in.

For decades, I have been writing and speaking about the damage Seaspiracy depicts in scientific articles, interviews, and yes, in documentary films as well. While much progress has been made, far too many people still have no idea of the problems facing the oceans. So, the prospect of a popular film on Netflix that could make the threat of destructive fisheries meaningful for its 200 million subscribers is something I welcomed.

The film includes all the damning evidence and dramatic footage required to make the important point that industrial fishing is โ€” throughout the world โ€” a too often out-of-control, sometimes criminal enterprise that needs to be reined in and regulated. In this, it reinforces and shares with a wide audience a knowledge that is widespread in the ocean conservation community, but not in the public at large.

However, overall Seaspiracy does more harm than good. It takes the very serious issue of the devastating impact of industrial fisheries on life in the ocean and then undermines it with an avalanche of falsehoods. It also employs questionable interviewing techniques, uses anti-Asian tropes, and blames the ocean conservation community, i.e., the very NGOs trying to fix things, rather than the industrial companies actually causing the problem.

Most importantly, it twists the narrative about ocean destruction to support the idea that we โ€” the Netflix subscribers of the world โ€” can save ocean biodiversity by turning vegan. In doing so, Seaspiracy undermines its tremendous potential value: to persuade people to work together, and push for change in policy and rules that will rein in an industry which often breaks the law with impunity.

Read the full story at Vox

Fishing industry blasts Netflix โ€˜Seaspiracyโ€™ documentary for suggested seafood boycott

April 12, 2021 โ€” A Netflix original documentary about the environmental impact of fishing has drawn the ire of local and national seafood experts, who have criticized โ€œSeaspiracyโ€ for a portrayal of the commercial fishing industry that they say is dangerous and misleading.

A group of industry professionals shared what they thought the 2021 documentary got wrong and what they wish it had done instead during a virtual panel hosted by the Maine Coast Fishermenโ€™s Association on Friday.

The controversial movie encourages viewers to boycott the seafood industry as the most effective way to help save the oceans. It is directed by British filmmaker Ali Tabrizi and is from the same team that created โ€œCowspiracy,โ€ a similar film about the farming industry.

โ€œSeaspiracy,โ€ which has come under fire for using questionable data and studies, explores the role of plastic, whaling, marine parks and others for their impact on the oceans, but lays most of the blame on the commercial fishing industry, claiming that the idea of a sustainable fishery is a myth and accusing the industry of mass animal abuses.

It paints a dramatic picture: victims of the slave trade warn Tabrizi that his life is at risk if he keeps filming; dozens of dead sharks have their fins hacked off on a warehouse floor; the water turns red as whales are slaughtered; the filmmakers don hidden spy cameras and are tailed by police.

The imagery is effective, but critics warn that its overarching message, that thereโ€™s no such thing as a sustainable fishery and that the only way to save the oceans is to give up seafood, is not only fishy, but flat out wrong.

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

Donโ€™t Watch Netflixโ€™s Seaspiracy

April 8, 2021 โ€” Yesterday, the sun was shining bright, and birds were chirping outside my window, and the buds were really starting to come out on the trees. It was a stupidly perfect day really, and I had to go ruin it all by watching Seaspiracy.

The Netflix documentary has been among the streaming serviceโ€™s most popular films since coming out in late March, and yet nearly every marine scientist Iโ€™ve seen talking about it has wanted to see the movie sunk into the Challenger Deep, never to be seen again due to rampant misinformation. Iโ€™ll leave much of the debunking of the bad science in the film to the subject matter experts. (That includes some of those quoted in the film, who have also said they were misrepresented.) Whatโ€™s just as disturbing about Seaspiracy, though, is the facile way it frames up how to solve the problems facing the ocean and society in the privileged vegan bro savioriest way possible.

The premise of Seaspiracy is that Ali Tabrizi, its director and narrator, wanted to make a movie about the wonders of the ocean, but quickly got freaked out that humansโ€™ actions were strangling the seas. It chronicles his transition from doing local beach cleanups to getting concerned about whaling and going to the infamous cove in Taiji, Japan, where dolphin slaughters take place on the regular. That sets off a round-the-world trip and interviews with nearly three dozen experts or people involved in the fishing industry.

Read the full story at Gizmodo

Beyond โ€˜Seaspiracyโ€™: Debunking damaging myths in fisheries

April 2, 2021 โ€” Our response to the docudrama โ€œSeaspiracyโ€ focuses on the underlying motive of plant-based diets and how it misses its target by inciting fear rather than relying on facts.

The University of Washingtonโ€™s Sustainable Fisheries page regularly tracks misinformation in fisheries news.

The National Fisheries Institute was hot out of the gate with its reply last week.

The Alaska Fisheries Development Foundation tracked and documented socially responsible fishing practices in Alaskaโ€™s commercial fleet, starting in 2017. Hereโ€™s their report and project outline.

The Global Aquaculture Alliance details why the film should be ignored.

SeafoodSourceโ€™s report links to responses from many of the NGOs and others who claim to have been misrepresented in the docudrama โ€œSeaspiracy.โ€

Read the full story at National Fisherman

Seaspiracy: Netflix documentary accused of misrepresentation by participants

April 1, 2021 โ€” A Netflix documentary about the impact of commercial fishing has attracted celebrity endorsements and plaudits from fans with its damning picture of the harm the industry does to ocean life. But NGOs, sustainability labels and experts quoted in Seaspiracy have accused the film-makers of making โ€œmisleading claimsโ€, using out-of-context interviews and erroneous statistics.

Seaspiracy, made by the team behind the award-winning 2014 film Cowspiracy, which was backed by Leonardo DiCaprio, pours doubt on the idea of sustainable fishing, shines a spotlight on the aquaculture industry and introduces the notion of โ€œblood shrimpโ€, seafood tainted with slave labour and human rights abuses.

Launched last week, the 90-minute film is already trending on the platform as one of its Top 10 most watched films and programmes and has been praised by celebrities including Bryan Adams, the vegan Canadian rock star, who urged his followers to watch it and stop eating fish. Chris Froome, the seven Grand Tour-winning British cyclist, tweeted that โ€œmy mind has been blownโ€ by the film. George Monbiot, the environmentalist and Guardian columnist, who appears in it, described it on Twitter as โ€œa brilliant exposรฉ of the greatest threat to marine life: fishingโ€.

Directed by Ali Tabrizi, a film-maker from Kent, the wide-ranging documentary questions the sustainable seafood movement and looks at the way the Dolphin Safe and Marine Stewardship Council labels may not be able to provide the assurances consumers are looking for.

Read the full story at The Guardian

Industry pans Seaspiracy as misleading

March 31, 2021 โ€” Groups and organizations involved in the global seafood industry, as well as individual stakeholders and scientists, are responding with concern to a new Netflix documentary, โ€œSeaspiracy,โ€ which purports to investigate the impact of commercial fishing on marine ecosystems and wildlife.

The 90-minute film, which has consistently led Netflixโ€™s top 10 rankings around the world since its late-March release, was created by the same team behind 2014โ€™s โ€œCowspiracy,โ€ a similar feature-length documentary spotlighting the animal agriculture industry.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

Dolphin Safe group alleges โ€˜Seaspiracyโ€™ left out critical details from executiveโ€™s interview

March 30, 2021 โ€” An executive with the international organization responsible for the Dolphin Safe tuna label is charging that the producers of the new Netflix documentary โ€œSeaspiracyโ€ took his comments out of context to suggest dolphins are being slaughtered by tuna fishing operations.

Mark Palmer, associate director USA, for the International Marine Mammal Project (IMMP), which is operated by the Earth Island Institute, said he provided the documentaryโ€™s film crew with โ€œextensive information on how the Dolphin Safe label is used for the protection of dolphins.โ€

None of this information was used in the documentary, he said in a post on the groupโ€™s website.

Palmer, in one of the more memorable scenes from the film, was asked if his group could guarantee that no dolphins were ever killed in any tuna fishery anywhere in the world.

Read the full story at IntraFish

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