Welcome   Sponsored By
Subscribe | Register | Advertise | Newsletter | About us | Contact us
If you would like to send us an article, contact Margaret Stacey
   


Image: Fisker Forum / FIS

UK supermarkets told, don’t buy into voluntary ‘standards’ spin

  (UNITED KINGDOM, 3/7/2023)

UK supermarkets are being advised to steer clear of voluntary standards, tools and certifications when it comes to clearing their seafood supply chains of labour exploitation and modern slavery.

Image: ITF / FIS

ITF fishers’ rights expert Chris Williams has told seafood retail and distribution leaders that while increasingly popular, voluntary mechanisms could not be relied upon when conducting human rights due diligence and modern slavery checks.

‘The labour and human rights abuses exposed in the fisheries sector in recent years quite rightly led to calls for action, but the proliferation of voluntary tools built on unenforceable labour standards has brought us no closer to ridding the industry of systemic exploitation. They may have made things worse,’ he said.

‘Each one of these tools claims to give retailers and their customers at home reliable assurances that their dinner was caught free from forced labour and labour exploitation. The reality is that without workers’ voices, missing as they are from these tools’ development and in their implementation frameworks, then there is little prospect voluntary certifications are worth the paper they’re written on.’

Speaking to the Seafood Ethics Action Alliance’s annual general meeting, he urged Alliance members to reject voluntary, meaningless certifications, such as the FISH Standard, which an independent watchdog assessed as likely to ‘fail to achieve its stated objective’ when the seafood processing industry launched the standard two years ago.

SEA Alliance members include the eight largest UK supermarkets and major seafood businesses and brands, together accounting for over 90% of UK grocery retail sales.

‘Shoppers should be suspicious of any standard developed without a meaningful voice for workers, which are so often lacking in adequate auditing and enforcement mechanisms. A cynic would say that some of these are set up to be ineffective,’ Chris Williams said.

Consumers want their food to be free of exploitation, abuse and mistreatment of crew. They don’t want to see ‘fairwashing’ on human rights and labour standards. That’s why they need certifications to be meaningful.

He commented that if a if a label states a product is free of those things, then a retailer has a responsibility to ensure that ‘it does what it says on the tin’.

‘The only reliable, enforceable method is through legally binding workplace agreements for crew, enforced by accountability between retailers and their suppliers, and backed up by strong regulation,’ he said, adding that voluntary standards are no substitute for public regulation, nor do they eliminate the need to protect rights holders from corporate abuses.

He called for more governments to adopt the ILO’s Work in Fishing Convention (C188). Despite its importance to fishers’ safety, conditions and pay, the convention has been ratified just 20 times since it came into force in 2017.

‘Fairwashing’ benefits brands – not fishermen

Far from fulfilling their specific goal of providing accurate assessments of labour outcomes and risks, or even a more general goal of improving in the working and living conditions of crew, Chris Williams said that voluntary tools and standards make the problems of fishers worse.

 

He pointed to the findings from research recently published in Marine Policy he authored alongside Dr Jess Sparks, Research Assistant Professor at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts University. In the peer reviewed paper, Williams and Dr Sparks make the case that voluntary tools give the illusion of oversight of labour outcomes but in practice undermined existing and potential regulation protecting fishers.

‘The shift from binding, international conventions and their standards into non-binding commitments undertaken purely in the private sphere without the engagement or leadership of workers creates an absence of legally enforceable consequences – increasing the likelihood of abuses to take place,’ said Jess Sparks, who led the research.

“‘Voluntarisation’ denies workers the right to meaningful remedy and recourse, while rewarding unfounded and false narratives that conditions have improved with increased market access for those who can pay.’

Source: Fisker Forum

[email protected]
www.seafood.media


Information of the company:
Address: ITF House, 49-60 Borough Road,
City: London
State/ZIP: England (SE1 1DR)
Country: United Kingdom
Phone: +44 20 7403 2733
E-Mail: [email protected]
More about:


Location:



 


Click to know how to advertise in FIS
MORE ARTICLES
Nissui launches microwave-ready grilled and fried fish dishes for busy households
SAFET releases report on key technologies for sustainable fisheries management and ocean protection
IceFish Conference Hits Milestone: Program Set to Double in 2026
Mowi Secures Strategic Partnership with Skretting to Boost Feed Efficiency
New Automated Mackerel Sorter Promises Higher Value for Pelagic Producers
Skretting and Longyang Fresh Deepen Strategic Partnership
Insectum Emerges as Danish Insect Industry's Sole Survivor, Poised for Global Expansion
Carsoe Launches High-Tech 'Buffer Warehouse' to Revolutionize Frozen Logistics
Nomad Foods Reports Q3 Declines Amid Headwinds, Forecasts Low-End 2025 Results
Seeing Underwater: ELWAVE Secures €6 Million Funding for Advanced Electromagnetic Sensor Technology
Nissui Posts Robust Half-Year Profits, Driven by Aquaculture and Global Processing Gains
Marel: 'Automation and Digital Traceability Reshape the Whitefish Industry'
Mowi Sets Ambitious 2030 Targets for Sustainable Salmon Farming
Aquaculture Breakthrough: Skretting Launches Necto, a Groundbreaking Functional Feed for Fish
From Heavy Industry to High-Tech Salmon: Kawasaki's MINATOMAÉ System Pioneers Suburban Aquaculture
JBT Marel Unveils 2024 Sustainability Report, Highlights Global Strategy for a Resilient Food System
Blue Lice Pioneers Tech-Driven Solution to Combat Sea Lice in Norwegian Aquaculture
First Sea-Based Salmon Farm in Africa to Launch in Namibia
Royal Greenland Reports Return to Profit in First Half of 2025 Amid Volatile Market
Samherji Reports EUR 45.6M Net Profit Amid Reinvestment
More Articles...

Lenguaje
FEATURED EVENTS
  
TOP STORIES
Argentine Illex Squid Season 2026: early start, active ports and encouraging signs in the South Atlantic
Argentina The early appearance of the resource north of parallel 49°S, the presence of large-sized specimens, and the steady arrival of squid jiggers at Puerto Madryn and Puerto Deseado shape an intense sta...
What Type of Fish Does Burger King Use for Its Iconic Fish Sandwich?
Worldwide From a modest debut in the 1970s to a globally recognized menu staple, Burger King’s fish sandwich has evolved through decades of reinvention—while keeping one key ingredient at its heart....
Opinion Article: Overpricing, Conflicts of Interest, and Corruption in Fishing (Part 3 of 4
Argentina From the information gathered, it could be presumed—subject to judicial investigation—that the bidding processes for the research vessels “Víctor Angelescu” and “M...
EESC calls for a guaranteed €6.1 billion to implement the Common Fisheries Policy from 2028 to 2034
European Union The Plenary of the European Economic and Social Committee approves by a large majority an opinion demanding a dedicated budget for fisheries and greater legal certainty for maritime professionals The...
 

Umios Corporation | Maruha Nichiro Corporation
Nichirei Corporation - Headquarters
Pesquera El Golfo S.A.
Ventisqueros - Productos del Mar Ventisqueros S.A
Wärtsilä Corporation - Wartsila Group Headquarters
ITOCHU Corporation - Headquarters
BAADER - Nordischer Maschinenbau Rud. Baader GmbH+Co.KG (Head Office)
Inmarsat plc - Global Headquarters
Marks & Spencer
Tesco PLC (Supermarket) - Headquarters
Sea Harvest Corporation (PTY) Ltd. - Group Headquarters
I&J - Irvin & Johnson Holding Company (Pty) Ltd.
AquaChile S.A. - Group Headquarters
Pesquera San Jose S.A.
Nutreco N.V. - Head Office
CNFC China National Fisheries Corporation - Group Headquarters
W. van der Zwan & Zn. B.V.
SMMI - Sunderland Marine Mutual Insurance Co., Ltd. - Headquarters
Icicle Seafoods, Inc
Starkist Seafood Co. - Headquearters
Trident Seafoods Corp.
American Seafoods Group LLC - Head Office
Marel - Group Headquarters
SalMar ASA - Group Headquarters
Sajo Industries Co., Ltd
Hansung Enterprise Co.,Ltd.
BIM - Irish Sea Fisheries Board (An Bord Iascaigh Mhara)
CEFAS - Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquaculture Science
COPEINCA ASA - Corporacion Pesquera Inca S.A.C.
Chun Cheng Fishery Enterprise Pte Ltd.
VASEP - Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters & Producers
Gomes da Costa
Furuno Electric Co., Ltd. (Headquarters)
NISSUI - Nippon Suisan Kaisha, Ltd. - Group Headquarters
FAO - Food and Agriculture Organization - Fisheries and Aquaculture Department (Headquarter)
Hagoromo Foods Co., Ltd.
Koden Electronics Co., Ltd. (Headquarters)
A.P. Møller - Maersk A/S - Headquarters
BVQI - Bureau Veritas Quality International (Head Office)
UPS - United Parcel Service, Inc. - Headquarters
Brim ehf (formerly HB Grandi Ltd) - Headquarters
Hamburg Süd Group - (Headquearters)
Armadora Pereira S.A. - Grupo Pereira Headquarters
Costa Meeresspezialitäten GmbH & Co. KG
NOAA - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Headquarters)
Mowi ASA (formerly Marine Harvest ASA) - Headquarters
Marubeni Europe Plc -UK-
Findus Ltd
Icom Inc. (Headquarter)
WWF Centroamerica
Oceana Group Limited
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation
Ajinomoto Co., Inc. - Headquarters
Friosur S.A. - Headquarters
Cargill, Incorporated - Global Headquarters
Benihana Inc.
Leardini Pescados Ltda
CJ Corporation  - Group Headquarters
Greenpeace International - The Netherlands | Headquarters
David Suzuki Foundation
Fisheries and Oceans Canada -Communications Branch-
Mitsui & Co.,Ltd - Headquarters
NOREBO Group (former Ocean Trawlers Group)
Natori Co., Ltd.
Carrefour Supermarket - Headquarters
FedEx Corporation - Headquarters
Cooke Aquaculture Inc. - Group Headquarters
AKBM - Aker BioMarine ASA
Seafood Choices Alliance -Headquarter-
Austevoll Seafood ASA
Walmart | Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Supermarket) - Headquarters
New Japan Radio Co.Ltd (JRC) -Head Office-
Gulfstream JSC
Marine Stewardship Council - MSC Worldwide Headquarters
Royal Dutch Shell plc (Headquarter)
Genki Sushi Co.,Ltd
Iceland Pelagic ehf
AXA Assistance Argentina S.A.
Caterpillar Inc. - Headquarters
Tiger Brands Limited
SeaChoice
National Geographic Society
AmazonFresh, LLC - AmazonFresh

Copyright 1995 - 2026 Seafood Media Group Ltd.| All Rights Reserved.   DISCLAIMER