Certification of products from aquaculture is
contributing to sustainable production, but it also has serious limits.
Therefore, it should be seen as one approach among many for steering
aquaculture toward sustainability. This is argued by an international
team of researchers in a paper published in Science on September 6, 2013.
Aquaculture is one of the fastest growing global food production
systems, and now contributes around 13 percent of world animal-protein supply.
It provides almost half of the world's supply of seafood. The rapid
expansion of the sector has come with a wide range of concerns about the
environmental and social impact of aquaculture. In response, NGO-led
certification schemes, such as the Dutch based Aquaculture Stewardship
Council (ASC), have developed standards against which the environmental
and social performance of aquaculture can be measured.
Based on the work of an international network of researchers, the
paper argues that aquaculture certification has limits as a means of
governing sustainable production. Aquaculture certification is limited
in the volume of global production it can certify, given market demand
for certified seafood is currently limited to the US and EU while the
majority of seafood consumption occurs in other markets. The impact of
certification is also limited in reaching wider sustainability goals, it
is focused on the farm-level instead of the cumulative impacts of
multiple farms in one location on the surrounding environment or farming
communities. Furthermore it is limited in its ability to include
stakeholders, particularly smallholder producers, in the Global South
where the vast majority of global production comes from.
The implication of these limits is that certification needs to be
seen as but one of a wider array of strategies for regulating
sustainable production. Assumptions that countries in the Global South
are unwilling or incapable to regulate aquaculture no longer holds true
everywhere. Many of these countries have experience with international
food safety regulation and represent some of the most important domestic
markets for aquaculture products globally. Certification should
therefore be seen as part of a broader array of governance approaches
for promoting sustainable aquaculture production. Global certification
also needs to better complement national level sustainability
programmes. Further research is needed to determine what kind of hybrid
forms of environmental governance can be developed that move beyond an
overemphasis on certification, and instead draw on the strength of
states, the private sector and institutions such as the ASC.
Certification volume
Only a 4.6 percent of the global aquaculture production is currently
certified. The 13 main species currently covered by the ASC currently
account for 41.6 percent of the worldwide aquaculture production, leaving
58.4 percent of aquaculture production with no opportunity for certification.
The recent introduction of two additional certification labels for
multispecies standards has expanded the potentially certifiable volume
to 73.5 percent. In practice, however, the new standards will only lead to an
increase of 0.1 percent in certified volume because much of what is potentially
certifiable is produced in countries like China with little demand for
sustainability certification.
Publication
S. R. Bush, B. Belton, D. Hall, P. Vandergeest, F. J. Murray, S.
Ponte, P. Oosterveer, M. S. Islam, A. P. J. Mol, M. Hatanaka, F.
Kruijssen, T. T. T. Ha, D. C. Little, R. Kusumawati. Certify Sustainable
Aquaculture? Science Vol. 341: 1067-1068, 6 September 2013.
English: Floating aquaculture on Puget Sound. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
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