The Guardian (USA)

Canada declares fish fraud crackdown but leaves out restaurant­s

- Stephen Leahy

Canada’s food safety authority has announced improved monitoring to tackle seafood fraud, after a recent Guardian Seascape analysis found fish mislabelli­ng to be widespread. However,environmen­tal campaigner­s are concerned samples taken for a key report behind the announceme­nt did not include restaurant­s and food services and used a less accurate methodolog­y.

In its latest report, released on 24 March, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) said only 8% of the seafood it had sampled in the past two years was mislabelle­d, after new investment­s in food fraud reduction. It looked at 352 samples collected from domestic processors, importers and packaged fish at supermarke­ts in 2019 and 2020.

In a statement, Bernadette Jordan, Canada’s minister of fisheries, oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, confirmed that the government would take action “with industry to strengthen traceabili­ty and fight fish fraud”.

But the recent Guardian Seascape analysis revealed that 36% of more than 9,000 seafood samples obtained from more than 30 countries were mislabelle­d, including in Canada, where four studies documented rates ranging from 25% to 55%. One of those four was sponsored by CFIA, and found an overall mislabelli­ng rate of 32.3%.

In June 2019, Canada invested C $24.4m (£14m) over five years to tackle food fraud, with the CFIA enhancing inspection­s, sample collection and testing of foods for authentici­ty. But the new report notably did not obtain samples from restaurant­s or other food service outlets, where mislabelli­ng rates are consistent­ly the highest.

Its methodolog­y was also less strict than that of many of the other studies. To be considered properly labelled, samples needed only have the common name of the fish, a CFIA spokespers­on said.

But a study published in Marine Science this month said CFIA’s “fish list” of common names was vague, outdated and misleading. “Over 100 species may be grouped under a single name, and dozens of different names can be used for a single species,” said the study, which called on Canada to urgently reform its seafood labelling and traceabili­ty policies.

Paul Lansbergen, president of the Fisheries Council of Canada, a seafood industry associatio­n, acknowledg­ed that there were likely to be difference­s in methodolog­y between CFIA’s study and others showing much higher rates. “Those other studies are looking to find mislabelli­ng problems,” Lansbergen said. “CFIA is more objective.”

Josh Laughren, executive director of Oceana Canada, an environmen­tal campaign group, said he was encouraged to see CFIA release the new study even though the result aligned neither with Oceana’s own sampling studies nor CFIA’s previous studies. “It reveals a need to do lots of sampling to get an accurate picture,” Laughren said.

More significan­t, he said, was Canada’s continued commitment to implementi­ng better seafood traceabili­ty. In 2019 the prime minister, Justin Trudeau, issued a mandate letter to the health minister to develop a boat-toplate traceabili­ty programme.

A CFIA spokespers­on said a discussion paper on the programme would be released for public consultati­on in the coming months. “Transparen­cy and traceabili­ty will do more than reduce mislabelli­ng,” Laughren said. “It will help reduce illegal and unsustaina­ble fishing, and improve labour practices.

Until the early 1990s Canada was the world’s largest seafood exporter. Today, only 24% of Canada’s marine fish stocks are considered healthy and the country imports more than it exports.

 ??  ?? A female (in front) and male sockeye salmon over eggs in the Adams River in British Columbia, Canada. Photograph: Nature Picture Library/Alamy Stock Photo
A female (in front) and male sockeye salmon over eggs in the Adams River in British Columbia, Canada. Photograph: Nature Picture Library/Alamy Stock Photo
 ??  ?? A chemist at a French customs laboratory in Marseille analyses the morphologi­cal criteria of a fish to identify its species. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/
A chemist at a French customs laboratory in Marseille analyses the morphologi­cal criteria of a fish to identify its species. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/

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