Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.

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Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
Canned Tuna: Our Approach
    & Some Thoughts.
Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
London

Reading
Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
Organico/Fish4Ever

6 Employees
£2million turnover
100% organic/sustainable

Customers: independents,
on-line, some supermarkets
and some export

Fish4Ever – 10 years in May             London

                              Reading
Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
Our Product Range

Fish4Ever – 19 lines, 5 planned, 3 tunas:
albacore/white, yellowfin + skipjack.
Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
Ethical/Sustainable
Products: 100% organic or sustainable - “Slow Food”
principles – good, clean, fair.

Product suppliers are mostly SME’s + co-op’s.

Service suppliers are ethical champions.
Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
MSC Commitment
                                              % of lines certified

                            29%                                             71%
         2008

                                       52%                                             48%
         2009

                                                 73%                                         27%
         2010

Based on existing MSC lines and fisheries already certified where we are waiting for
packaging as well as fisheries in process of certification.
Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
MSC Range
Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
Endorsements & Mentions

Antony Worrall Thompson                                      Charles Clover
                                  Hugh Fearnley Wittington
                                                                              Craig Sams

         Highly trusted ethical publications...
Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
Shows,
 etc.
Canned Tuna: Our Approach & Some Thoughts.
Trade Newsletter
… and a             Video.

Shot on location in the Maldives and Islington.
Sustainability: Our Approach
Land Sea People
Organic Agriculture.
Better for Climate Change (but complicated).
General eco-benefits (peak oil + phosphates,
water retention, soil health).
Bio-diversity: species, eco-system, resilience.
No toxic chemicals – on land or in production.
High animal welfare standards.
Nitrate leaching – run-off from use of fertilisers
and intensive animal rearing.
A n “IPCC for agriculture” which involved 400 academic/scientific authors
 in 52 countries sees organic as a best practise expression of agricultural
knowledge, science and technology for a sustainable development to deal
           with the future social, health and food supply issues.

                        www.aggassesment.org
Focus on Nitrate Leaching
  Up to 400 “dead areas” in coastal waters of the
      sea as a result of excessive leaching of
  phosphates and nitrates from fertilisers used in
                intensive farming....
          Diaz and Rosenberg in Science August 2008

  “Over 30% of UK estuaries and 15% of coastal
waters are at risk from nutrients, pesticides, organic
           pollutants and heavy metals”
         Silent Seas 2008 – Marine Conservation Society
Map of “Dead Seas”

                                            Black spots indicate dead sea areas

Diaz and Rosenberg in Science August 2008
Land Sea People
Main Sustainability Problems
Overfishing
Overcapacity, too much fishing, catch improvement,
poor management or enforcement.

Damaging Methods
Endangered species (extinction), habitat/food-chain
damage, by-catch/discard other fish + juveniles.

Illegal Fishing
Effect on management/stock levels.
Basic Tuna Market Info
5 Commercial Species
4 mil tons – skipjack, yellowfin, big-eye, albacore,
bluefin. 5 RTA/RFMA.

UK Canned Fish
Circa 1/3rd of total liveweight consumption; 50%
is tuna, of which 95%+ is skipjack; c 90%
Princes, John West, supermarket own label.

UK Consumers
Broad + deep coverage (age, wealth), cheap,
mostly used as sandwich filling.
Our Original Tuna Research.

Tuna in Trouble/Fortuna

Seafood Watch Reports on
individual tuna species

“Tuna Resources” deLeina
Moreno & Majkowski

ICCAT and other RTA papers
- statistics, science, reports.
Overfishing...
What we can do:-
1. Try to choose better management options.
2. Support NGO’s recommendations and MSC.
3. Engage the consumer and retailers.
4. Prefer artisan/local fishing.

What we can’t do:-
1. Be the “expert opinion” on different stock levels.
2. Swap and change.
Table of High Sea Management Bodies

Source: FAO
Damaging Methods...

What we can do:-
1. Choose the most selective options.
2. No long lines, no purse-seiners on FAD’s (or on
   dolphins), no gillnets, no driftnets.
3. Avoid juvenile and spawning areas, especially if
   other concerns (illegal fishing/management).
From WWF: “Tuna in Trouble”
Illegal Fishing...

What we can do:-
1. Avoid areas known to be high risk.
2. Request/notify our suppliers to monitor illegal
   boat lists – FAO, Greenpeace...

What we can’t do:-
1. Know what’s going on better than the
   scientists or managers on site.
Land Sea People
Our “People” Principles
that the resource is the inheritance of the coastal
communities that have traditionally or historically
fished it.
that trade is “fair” and workers’ rights respected,
that employment, health and safety, food quality
and environmental regulations are observed - both
at the level of the fishing itself and the processing.
that local fishing and local production (especially in
North-South trade) is preferred.
Fish: A Huge Export Commodity
                                            developing world

Source: FAO State of World Fisheries 2007
Trade Flows/Exports to Europe

                       The waters of Africa supply some 25% of total fish
                       (by volumes) consumed in Europe.

Source: FAO State of World Fisheries 2007 (bn. tons)
Fair Fish Quotes
          Fortuna “Restoring the Balance” - WWF (2005)
  “16 of 17 (EU Fisheries Partnership Agreements)… involve tuna.
 Such distant water fishing often has devastating effects on coastal
                fisheries vital to local communities.”

Pirate Fish on Your Plate - Earth Justice Foundation EJF (2007)
   “Africa alone is now losing almost 1 billion US dollars a year to
  illegal fishing activities. Pirate fishing operations are stealing an
invaluable protein source from some of the world’s poorest people
     while damaging the livelihoods of legitimate local fishermen”

          Taking Tuna Out of The Can - Greenpeace (2008)
 “For equitable alternatives, purchasing tuna directly from the coastal
state operators is always preferred, as access agreements with foreign
   fishing nations are by and large incredibly unfair to the developing
                             coastal states”
Artisan Fleet versus
                          Industrial Fleet

               In this example from the Indian Ocean, the artisan fleet employs more
               than 4x the number of boats and almost 3x the number of people to catch
               approximately the same amount of fish.

Source: FAO State of World Fisheries 2007
Mapping Illegal Fishing in Africa

Source: Marine Resource Assessment Group (MRAG) (2005).
The Tuna Example: West Africa
                                    yellowfin

The map on the left shows foreign purse-seiner catch in yellow, and
local baitboats (pole&line) in red, long lines in blue: ICCAT 2000/04.
...Also a Problem of Fish Size.
                  Seafood Watch: Yellowfin Tuna Seafood Report

     According to figures quoted from
   ICCAT: “the average size of yellowfin
    caught ranges from 2.5 kg in Tema
   (Ghana) to 30 kg around the Azores,
     Canary Islands, and Cape Verde”
      “The main spawning ground (of
  yellowfin) is the equatorial zone of the
      Gulf of Guinea (off the Coast of
     Ghana), with spawning primarily
      occurring from January to April.
     Juveniles are generally found in
         coastal waters off Africa”.

Source Monterey Bay Aquarium: Seafood Watch
….and for East Africa
                               skipjack

The map on the right comes from the IOTC and shows in light green
the purse-seiner catch for skipjack tuna from 2000 to 2006.
UK Skipjack Tuna Imports

                     More than 50% of UK imports are from East/West African waters
                     where high levels of illegal fishing have been recorded on top of
                     the general issue of “resource theft.”

Source: Globefish March 2008, the FAO Market Reports Website
Issues and Dilemmas
2009: The Year of Tuna...
Apparent Results
Wide support for a ban on bluefin fishing.

Transfer in UK of several major customers to
pole and line skipjack.

Formation of ISSF – (International Seafood
Sustainability Foundation).

Little improvement in media/public knowledge.

The “broader picture” is missing.
The Missing Dimension
as featured in the Greenpeace Video.

               If people want us
                      to fish
                sustainably, they
               need to pay for it,
                  otherwise we
                have no choice -
                 we will need to
               fish like everyone
                       else.
Market Research People Say...
      I prefer fish that is ethically sourced
      and kinder to the environment (2008)
      25% agree strongly and 35% agree.

      Prove It Accountability
      Environmental and ethical issues
      retain the power to attract attention
      and spend with nearly half of UK
      adults (25 million) viewing them as
      important or very important and in the
      US 39% say they’d pay more for
      environmentally friendly products.
...But the Truth is More Prosaic.
   It’s about price and pleasure.

    Vast majority of
consumers not ready to                     Consumption is
  pay more for ethical                   first of all a selfish
        values.                                   act.

   Ethics/sustainability on the cheap.

   The more common a product, the harder it is
   to charge a premium on the market price.
Ricki Gervais as Zeitgeist

    Stressed/Busy           Cynical /ironic
     Overwhelmed            Un-believing/low trust

    Atomised                      Confused
Disconnected                      Un-knowledged

                    Self
                    First
The Zeitgeist Dilemma
                        It’s your job
                                        to do it for me

                               Marketing
                              “Make it simple”                 Retail
 Consumer                       - but it isn’t!
                                                            More a risk than
“I will If You Will”         “Value for values”             an opportunity
                              - but you can’t.
    “It’s not                                                 Ethics as an
  my problem”               Emotional message                   optional
                             - but we’re weary.             consumer choice
 “I don’t believe
    or trust it”
                       You won’t buy
“Why should I pay
     More”                               if /when I do...
Our “Fair Fish” Tuna...

A simple idea: support the local boats and the
local packer and therefore the local community.
Make sustainability financially viable.
But most Maldives tuna is canned in Thailand
and the market price is impossibly cheap.
...In a Non-Fair Market Place
                                      Thai-Maldives

   Pole and line fishing         Pole and line fishing
   Local industry supported
   Decent working conditions
   Fair fish premium

                                Premium only obtainable if
A real incentive to support     market is paying more but
    and even improve             approach is lowest cost
  sustainable approach             commodity-driven.
Where “sustainability” is now
                 for brands/products

  A secondary “feel good” argument behind a
  “real” consumer benefit.

  A “competitive edge” argument but not the core.

  An insurance policy against bad publicity.

  Part of the advertising budget.

        A dysfunctional add-on to the
        business of making money.
… and where it needs to be.
                                                              Ethical –
                                                          social and green
                                                          values built into
                                                            the products
                                                             we buy as
                                                             consumers

                                       Government
                                    to re-set the rules
                                    and enforce them.
                    Civic Society
                    Pressure for
                       Change

Market economics is not
“fit for purpose.”
Some Questions
Does “sustainability” need an official definition?

Internalising externalities: can we price-in
externalities - and if so which ones qualify?

Is POWER and/or SIZE an issue in sustainability?

Does the actual legal remit of companies need to
change?
if
“business as usual
 is not an option”
- it must be done differently...
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