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Wal-Mart Canada will only be selling sustainable fish within three years. (Photo: Wal-Mart)

Sustainable fish in stores is new trend

Click on the flag for more information about Canada CANADA
Wednesday, April 14, 2010, 21:40 (GMT + 9)

A growing number of retailers are opting to only sell sustainably sourced seafood in Canadian supermarkets.

A decade after they were first introduced, eco-friendly certified fish are expected to be the only fish on the menu for the country's large food retailers by 2013, CP reports.

"It's a huge shift," says Bill Fox, vice-president of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

Eventually, almost all the fish sold by national retailers will be sustainably harvested, up from eight to 10 per cent today, he said in an interview.

Wal-Mart Canada hopped on board Tuesday, announcing that it will within three years sell only "green" varieties of frozen, wild and farmed fish in its super centres network of 86 stores.

The retailing giant joined Loblaw, Sobey's and B.C.-based Overwaitea, which have committed to sell sustainable supplies.

Metro Inc., the Quebec-based operator of Metro, Food Basics and Super C, said it is weeks away from announcing its own plans to source its fish from sustainable sources.

The shift to sustainable fish got a transformational kick in 2006 when Arkansas-based Wal-Mart said it would only sell Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) fish by 2011.

On Tuesday, the US-based retailer's Canadian arm went a step further, by requiring all canned tuna to be sourced only from International Seafood Sustainability Foundation members.

While most canned tuna comes from healthy stocks, the move will help to ensure that doesn't reverse itself and that retailers have enough fish to sell, said foundation spokesman Michael Crispino.

"Running out of fish and having fish stocks that are overfished and in a horrible state...is not good for business."

John Lawrence, director of corporate social responsibility for Wal-Mart Canada, said the policy is part of a broader environmental strategy adopted by the world's largest company.

"This particular policy relates to fish but we certainly have goals around providing a larger selection of environmentally responsible products to our customers," he said in an interview.

Like all Wal-Mart efforts, this one if focused on delivering the products at lower prices because consumers are not interested in paying more for sustainable products, Lawrence added.

The Canadian supermarket business is intensely competitive. Wal-Mart's growing presence in the food aisles has had a major impact on the industry. Retail consultant Wendy Evans said the chain's sustainable seafood policy will force rivals to step up their own environmental plans.

"Wal-Mart being the largest company in the world is obviously a huge impact and they change the way business is done," she said.

Loblaw announced a year ago that it plans to source all seafood sold in its retail locations from sustainable sources by the end of 2013. It offers the most MSC certified products of any retailer in Canada with the introduction of 16 sustainable fish products in its frozen Blue Menu line.

Nearly 4,900 MSC-labeled products are sold around the world, up from 2,084 in 2008 and just three in 2000.

Fisheries will "realize that in order to sell into key markets they need to ensure that their practices are not depleting the stock and not harming the marine environment," she said.

By Denise Recalde
[email protected]
www.seafood.media


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