Supermarket Seafood Sustainability Scorecard

Supermarkets are one of our strongest connections to the oceans. As the link between the oceans and the consumer, supermarkets play a pivotal role in the destruction of our oceans and have big opportunities to help protect them.To help consumers make better seafood purchasing choices, Greenpeace eva...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Still Image
Language:English
Published: Greenpeace 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://issuelab.org/resources/26006/26006.pdf
https://issuelab.org/permalink/resource/26006
Description
Summary:Supermarkets are one of our strongest connections to the oceans. As the link between the oceans and the consumer, supermarkets play a pivotal role in the destruction of our oceans and have big opportunities to help protect them.To help consumers make better seafood purchasing choices, Greenpeace evaluates major U.S. retailers for seafood sustainability in four key areas:1. Policy: Greenpeace examines the systems in place that govern a company's purchasing decisions and how it avoids supporting destructive practices. It also encourages retailers to enforce strong standards for both the wild-caught and farm-raised seafood in their stores.2. Initiatives: Greenpeace evaluates retailers' participation in coalitions and initiatives that promote seafood sustainability and ocean conservation—such as supporting sustainable fishing, calling for protection of vital marine habitat like the Bering Sea Canyons, and working to stop human rights abuses in the seafood industry.3. Labeling and Transparency: Greenpeace takes into account retailers' levels of transparency about where and how they source their seafood, and how clearly this is communicated to customers. Retailers should create multiple ways for customers to learn about the products they buy and the impacts of their choices.4. Red List Inventory: Greenpeace investigates whether stores sell any destructively caught or endangered marine species on Greenpeace's Red List—a scientifically compiled list of 22 marine species that don't belong in supermarkets.