Whole Foods Market has been a Seafood Watch partner since 2010 and only sells wild-caught seafood from fisheries that are certified sustainable by the Marine Stewardship Council or rated as Best Choice or Good Alternative by Seafood Watch. (Arianna Nalbach – Monterey Herald)
MONTEREY – In the past few years, “sustainable” has become somewhat of a buzzword, with companies around the world scrambling to brand their products in a way that will make them appealing to eco-conscious customers.
Making sure these companies actually live up to their claims of sustainability has only become more important, especially when it comes to seafood. Since the 1970s, the amount of fish stocks that were at sustainable levels has dropped from 90% to 66%, and 90% of these fish stocks are being fished at or above their sustainable limit.
To the staff of the Monterey Bay Aquarium, it was a no-brainer to do something to address this issue. In the nearly 40 years since the aquarium opened its doors, its impact has expanded far beyond the boundaries of the building. One of its farthest-reaching programs is Seafood Watch, a sustainable seafood advisory list that provides guides for everyone from people shopping at the grocery store, to restaurants, to large food companies such as Whole Foods.
It “is really considered the global gold standard for science-based seafood sustainability,” Julie Packard, the executive director of the Monterey Bay Aquarium, told the Herald recently.
With the help of Seafood Watch and others, over 80% of grocery businesses in the United States and the European Union have committed to sourcing sustainable seafood. But the program wasn’t always the national scale phenomenon it is now. In fact, its foundation was something of an accident, said Erin Hudson, the Seafood Watch program director at the aquarium. In 1997, the aquarium opened up a temporary exhibit on sustainable seafood, titled “Fishing for Solutions: what’s the catch?” and focused on concepts of overfishing and bycatch.
To match the theme of the exhibit, the aquarium’s cafe modified its menu to feature more sustainably sourced seafood, and placed informative cards on each of the cafe tables to explain the changes. Aquarium staff noticed that people were taking these cards home and realized that there was a demand for information on sustainable seafood.
“That was kind of the light bulb moment, and the Seafood Watch program was born,” Hudson said.
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Seafood Watch’s guides divide fish into three different categories: green-rated, which are the most sustainable options, yellow, which are good alternatives if no green-rated seafood is available, and red, which should be avoided. The guide can be found online at https://www.seafoodwatch.org/
These recommendations are all based on scientific studies and surveys, and the ratings can vary even within fish species depending on how and where the fish was harvested. Chinook salmon, for example, are a good buy if they were farmed in New Zealand, but not so good if they were caught in Puget Sound.
At Seafood Watch’s outset in 1999, they developed one small card featuring a handful of species. But as demand grew, the amount of species grew from 32 in 2002 to over 300 species as of this year. In addition to printed cards, they also have a website and an app, where you can find guides by species or region, as well as for more specific food types such as sushi. For people on a last minute run to the grocery store, the simple regional guides should do the trick, says Hudson. But for those who want to dig deep, there is extensive information on each of the 300 species.
Although the program started out as a user-friendly production for individuals, a big part of its impact has been through the restaurant industry. “Culinarians are ambassadors for sustainable seafood,” Hudson explains. “They reach people in a very unique way through food.”
Seafood Watch partners with both restaurant behemoths like the Cheesecake Factory and individual chefs at smaller establishments. However, making seafood sustainable can be more difficult than just following a guide.
At the cafe that started it all, Monterey Bay Aquarium Executive Chef Matt Beaudin says he never has a dull day of work. One day he might be working with purveyors at U.S. Foods, the next talking to an abalone diver in San Diego. Part of the challenge of his job, he explains, is finding seafood that is both sustainable and tasty. “A lot of the time as a chef, I find that sure, it’s green rated, but it doesn’t always translate to good flavor on the plate.”
Beaudin remembers tasting the perfect green-rated Chinook salmon and wanting to buy it for the cafe, but his seafood purveyor didn’t sell it. After some convincing, however, the purveyor began selling this salmon, and now it is the go-to at restaurants all across the Monterey Bay area. “If doing the right thing is easy, everyone will do the right thing,” he explains.
But sourcing sustainable seafood hasn’t been easy for everyone. Hajime Sato, the James Beard award-winning chef and owner of Sozai, a sushi restaurant in Detroit, Michigan, decided to implement sustainable seafood in his restaurant more than 15 years ago, when questions from students in his classes prompted him to research the sourcing of common sushi fish. More than a decade later, he still struggles every day to make sure his restaurant is both sustainable and profitable. Part of the issue is distribution. According to Sato, one company distributes ingredients for nearly 80% of all sushi restaurants in the U.S. and they often don’t offer the fish Sato wants to buy. This is because consumers are used to certain types of sushi, he says, which usually use fish that aren’t sustainable.
“When people go to a sushi restaurant, they know exactly what they want to get, and if we don’t have it, then they’re going to leave,” Sato explained.
Sato has worked hard to create his own distribution system, ordering from dozens of different purveyors and paying high shipping costs as a result. At his former sushi restaurant in Seattle, sales went down 20% when they moved in a more sustainable direction. However, Sato hasn’t let the difficulty of pursuing sustainable seafood deter him from the cause.
“Once you know what you know, don’t you want to change?” he asked. “What I’m doing shouldn’t be anything special.”
Sato’s relationship with Seafood Watch hasn’t always been an easy one. Although he has known of and used Seafood Watch’s guidelines for years, he says that the organization didn’t always approve of many of his seafood choices, such as bycatch octopus that would have otherwise been wasted.
However, this year he partnered with the program to launch informational articles about sustainable sushi, and craft some recipes as well. “We have the same goal,” he said. “If there’s any chance of us saving the ocean in the future, we need to work together.”
Beaudin hopes to make sourcing sustainable seafood easier for chefs like Sato. In the past year, he has worked with major restaurant supplier U.S. Foods to formulate a list of green rated and good alternative seafood for chefs and other buyers to use while making purchases. Beaudin plans on sending these guides back to Seafood Watch to circulate amongst culinarians.
By working with companies at the source, Beaudin thinks sustainable seafood will only become easier to buy. “Having to think non-stop about what fish you’re using, it can be overwhelming,” he acknowledged. “If we can make the models easy, that’s the way to go.”
As excited as he is about Seafood Watch’s partnerships with big companies, Beaudin emphasizes that a lot of the power to effect change lies with individual consumers. After all, if no one wants to buy sustainable fish, no one will serve it. “Never underestimate the importance of personal decisions when it relates to sustainability,” he said.
Sato agrees and emphasizes that in order for any change to happen, consumers have to start asking questions. “Break away from the four or five fish that you might be eating, and then start asking that little question to the chefs, ‘what’s local,’ ‘what’s in season,’ ‘what’s sustainable?’” he said. “You ask a question to the fishmonger or the restaurant, they might think it’s a good marketing tool. And if they get these questions a lot, then maybe things will change.”
“We can slowly, maybe, change things one or two percent. That’s what the general public can do, just a little bit more.”
Originally published at Katherine Irving