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Three-quarters of global whitefish fisheries now MSC-certified

September 12, 2025 โ€” The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) has announced that three-quarters of the whitefish caught in global fisheries is now certified MSC sustainable, representing โ€œa major milestone for the seafood industry.โ€

โ€œWhitefish represents one of the most compelling sustainability success stories in seafood,โ€ MSC Chief Program Officer Nicolas Guichoux said. โ€œMany of these fisheries have now maintained certification for decades and continued to improve their practices, demonstrating not only their long-term commitment to operating responsibly but the clear commercial incentive of doing so, as well.โ€

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

UK: Will American Fish Save Our Chippies?

June 6, 2023 โ€” BRITISH chippies battling soaring prices could start serving fish imported from the US by the end of this year.

A huge rise in the cost of cod and haddock, alongside a tariff on Russian white fish, is forcing firms to look for cheaper alternatives, including rockfish, also known as Pacific perch, and hake, which the US west coast has in abundance. They both taste similar to cod.

Andrew Crook, president of the National Federation of Fish Friers, visited Oregon last month as part of a delegation from the UK seafood industry. He said the huge surplus of fish in the US could โ€˜take the pressure offโ€™ needing to find expensive supplies closer to home.

Read the full article at Seafoodnews.com

UK restaurants seek relief as Russian whitefish sanctions loom

May 16, 2022 โ€” The U.K.โ€™s restaurant and hospitality industry is asking for financial help as it faces higher taxes and rapidly rising seafood prices due to inflation and impending Russian sanctions.

The U.K. government issued sanctions against Russian goods โ€“ including the installation of a 35 percent tariff on whitefish โ€“ in March. In April, a government official said the sanctions had been โ€œdelayed while we sort some technicalities,โ€ but noted โ€œwe are totally committed to them,โ€ per Politico.

Read the full story at SeafoodSource

 

Switch and chips: 20 percent of fish are purposely mislabeled, sometimes dangerously

September 9, 2016 โ€” In the bizarro world of seafood fraud, a fish is not always what it seems.

When sold in Brazil, largetooth sawfish โ€” a species classified as critically endangered โ€” becomes anonymous โ€œshark.โ€

When sold in a certain Santa Monica, Calif., sushi shop, illegal whale meat became fatty tuna. (The restaurant has since shut down.)

And when sold across the United States, cheap Asian catfish becomes one of 18 types of white fish fraudsters want it to be, according to a recent report.

Worldwide, one in five pieces of fish meat is incorrectly named on the menu or label, revealed the new survey representing 25,000 fish samples.

Oceana, a marine conservation and advocacy group, released the report on Wednesday, and updated the global map it created in 2014. The new map is interactive and highlights news stories of restaurant fraud, as well as DNA analysis and other scientific studies.

Read the full story at the Washington Post

ALASKA: Sea Share steadily expands donations of fish to the needy

July 18, 2016 โ€” The decades long โ€œbycatch to food banksโ€ program has grown far beyond its Alaska origins.

Today, only 10 percent of the fish going to hunger-relief programs is bycatch โ€” primarily halibut and salmon taken accidentally in other fisheries. The remainder is first-run products donated to Sea Share, the nationโ€™s only nonprofit that donates fish through a network of fishermen, processors, packagers and transporters.

Sea Share began in 1993 when Bering Sea fishermen pushed to be allowed to send fish taken as bycatch to food banks โ€” instead of tossing them back, as required by law.

โ€œBack then, that was the only thing that we were set up to do, and we are the only entity authorized to retain such fish. It became a rallying point for a lot of stakeholders, and from that beginning weโ€™ve expanded to the Gulf of Alaska, and grown to 28 states and over 200 million fish meals a year,โ€ said Jim Harmon, Sea Share director.

Some seafood companies commit a portion of their sales or donate products to Sea Share. Vessels in the At-sea Processors Association have donated 250,000 pounds of whitefish each year for 15 years, which are turned into breaded portions. Sea Shareโ€™s roster also has grown to include tilapia, shrimp, cod, tuna and other seafood products.

Over the years, Sea Share has ramped up donations in Alaska, where halibut portions from Kodiak fisheries are used locally, in Kenai as well as being flown to Nome and Kotzebue, courtesy of the U.S. Coast Guard. A new freezer container has been stationed at the Alaska Peninsula port of Dillingham, holding 8,500 pounds of fish, and several more are being added to hubs in Western Alaska, Harmon said.

โ€œI think weโ€™ll probably do 250,000 pounds in the state this year,โ€ he added.

Read the full story at the Alaska Dispatch News

SEA TO TABLE: Fixing a Broken System

June 9, 2016 โ€” The US exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in the ocean is the worldโ€™s largest, and American fishery management is the worldโ€™s best. Yet more than 90% of all seafood consumed in the US is imported, and more than 75% is one of only four species: shrimp (mostly farmed in Asia), salmon (mostly farmed in Chile), tuna (almost all canned), and whitefish (mostly tilapia farmed under the most dubious conditions).

Wild fishing is the last true hunting on earth. Seafood is universally considered the healthiest protein. With the waters surrounding Americaโ€™s traditional wild fishing communities blessed with dozens of abundant, sustainable, healthy and delicious species, why donโ€™t Americans accept the incredible gifts bestowed on them?.

Americans are accustomed to cheap protein. Corn, soy and wheat are government subsidized and provide artificially low cost feed to industrial meat production. That means cheap meat for consumers, but at a frightening cost to the environment, small farmers, animal welfare, and human health.

Illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing is a worldwide scourge, and last yearโ€™s AP investigative report shone a light on rampant seafood slavery. Harvesting fish illegally without any labor cost is an excellent business model for cheap imported seafood.

Meanwhile traditional American fishing communities have struggled under the stringent but essential US fisheries management policies that have brought our fisheries back from the brink to the rebuilt status of today. We owe it ourselves to reward domestic fishermen for their gallant efforts.

Read the full opinion piece at the Huffington Post

Misunderstood pollock a key to New England seafoodโ€™s future

May 9, 2016 โ€” PORTLAND, Maine โ€” It might not be time yet to rechristen Cape Cod as Cape Pollock, but the humble fish is staking its claim.

The Atlantic pollock has long played a role in New Englandโ€™s fishing industry as a cheaper alternative to cod and haddock, but the fishโ€™s place in Americaโ€™s oldest fishing industry is expanding as stocks like cod fade.

But the fish has an image problem.

While considered a whitefish, its uncooked gray-pinkish color looks drab compared to the snow-white cod fillets consumers are used to seeing on seafood counters. And many confuse it with the very different Alaska pollock, which is the subject of a much larger industrial fishery that provides fish for processed food products such as the McDonaldโ€™s Filet-O-Fish.

A loose consortium of fishermen, processors, restaurateurs and sustainable seafood advocates wants to change all that. Theyโ€™re trying to rebrand Atlantic pollock as New Englandโ€™s fish, and the push is catching on in places like food-crazy Portland, where food trucks offer pollock tacos to eager crowds.

Read the full story from the Associated Press

Why homemade gefilte fish is becoming an endangered species at Passover

April 19, 2016 โ€” As if preparing for Passover wasnโ€™t enough work and worry, now comes a gefilte fish crisis.

This might not be as consequential as, say, the Atlantic cod crisis. But for the diminishing few of us who still patshke (slave away) in the kitchen before Passover to make traditional gefilte fish from scratch, itโ€™s definitely troubling.

Whatโ€™s happened is that the freshwater fish used in making it โ€” that tried-and-true trifecta of pike, carp, and whitefish โ€” has become so hard to find and so expensive that homemade gefilte fish could someday soon be an endangered species. I worry we Jews are being priced out of our tradition.

โ€œItโ€™s all about supply and demand,โ€ said Mike Machado, purchasing director of Boston Sword & Tuna, a fish wholesaler. โ€œThe species arenโ€™t indigenous to this area. A lot of the whitefish nowadays, it goes to New York, which has the highest contingent of Jewish people.โ€

Read the full story at The Boston Globe

Cape group pushes dogfish as viable seafood option

March 9, 2016 โ€” BOSTON โ€” The Seafood Expo is the largest seafood show in North America covering over 516,000 square feet of exhibition space this week at the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center.

For the second year in a row, members of the Cape Cod Commercial Fishermenโ€™s Alliance spent three days talking dogfish with international and national buyers and sellers, and executive chefs at the show as part of an ongoing campaign to put the small shark on restaurant menus and on the dinner table as a sustainably caught, local whitefish.

โ€œI think the market is gigantic and, if you talk to the fishermen in Chatham, they will tell you, you canโ€™t drop a hook in the water without getting a dogfish. Between those two facts, (the market) will continue to build over time, but itโ€™s already gaining a lot of traction,โ€ said Michael Dimin, founder of Sea to Table, a company that markets artisanal fish directly to chefs across the country.

Processers successfully campaigned to get dogfish certified by the Marine Stewardship Council a few years back because the population was booming and the dogfish daily trip limit is kept low at 5,000 pounds. Chatham catches about 6 million pounds out of the stateโ€™s 9 million pounds in annual landings. The total landings of 16 million pounds fall far below the 50 million pounds scientists consider a sustainable catch.

Compared with other species, dogfish, a small coastal shark, are close to shore and easy to catch. Cod are now far offshore, as are haddock, and monkfish involves a three-day trip, hundreds of miles roundtrip in relatively small boats.

Read the full story at Cape Cod Times

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