General statement
[retailer] acknowledges that:
- The world’s fish stocks are being unsustainably harvested
and the industry is involved in unsustainable and unfair practises,
both on land and at sea
- The current decline of fish
resources, coupled with the current consumption patterns of the
developed world is not sustainable nor equitable, and needs to be
reversed
- [name] as a retailer has a responsibility to act, and needs to play a role in reversing the decline of living marine resources.
[retailer] acknowledges that if supermarkets are to continue to supply
what many people see as a healthy food option, comprehensive
sustainable and equitable seafood sourcing policies must be developed
and implemented.
[retailer] understands that sustainable and equitable seafood does not fall under any of the following four categories:
- Seafood from overfished stocks or species listed as
vulnerable, threatened, endangered, critically endangered, data
deficient or protected on any domestic or international list
- Species that are vulnerable to exploitation
- Seafood from poorly managed or illegal, unregulated and undocumented – IUU fisheries.
- Seafood caught or farmed using methods that are detrimental to other marine species and/or habitats.
- Seafood
of which the harvesting or growing threatens the traditional fishing
grounds/ livelihoods of, especially, the poor of developing countries,
or is the result of an inequitable fisheries access agreement to the
stocks of developing coastal countries.
In order to deliver sustainable and equitable seafood to our customers,
[retailer] is developing/has developed the following goals and
timelines for sustainable fish procurement:
1. Remove the worst
- Stop buying all fish that comes out as red in Greenpeace methodology (or equivalent) species – [xx months]
2. Support the best
- Increase the range of seafood that scores highest in terms
of sustainability (scores shades of green according to Greenpeace
methodology) available – [xx months]
3. Improve the rest
- Work with suppliers to source fish from the best sources
available for the remaining species. Work with governments, the fishing
industry, NGOs and scientists to improve the management, sustainability
and fairness of the fisheries that [retailer] continues to source from.
- Stop
selling fish from fisheries and suppliers that refuse to change to more
sustainable methods, or to give fair returns to the coastal states for
access to their fisheries
- Only sell seafood that is traceable back to the vessel that caught it, with evidence that the catch was within quota.
4. Demonstrate and promote sustainable and equitable practices
- Promote sustainable and equitable seafood to customers
- Clearly
label ALL products containing seafood with the common and scientific
names, the stock from which the seafood was caught or the farm in which
it was cultivated, and the detailed fishing or harvesting method used
- Support sustainability initiatives
- Make this policy publicly available and conduct a publicly available annual status report on the implementation of the policy
- Train staff to help customers choose sustainable seafood
- Promote alternative sources of omega-3 fatty acids