Marine Stewardship Council
Non-profit organization | |
Industry | Sustainable seafood ecolabel programme |
Founded | [1] |
Headquarters | Marine House, 1 Snow Hill, London, EC1A 2DH, United Kingdom |
Key people |
|
Number of employees | Circa 120 |
Slogan | Certified sustainable seafood |
Website |
www |
Footnotes / references [2] |
The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) is an independent non-profit organization which sets a standard for sustainable fishing. Fisheries that wish to demonstrate they are well managed and sustainable compared to the science-based MSC standard are assessed by a team of experts who are independent of both the fishery and the MSC. Seafood products can display the blue MSC ecolabel only if that seafood can be traced back through the supply chain to a fishery that has been certified against the MSC standard.[3]
The mission of the Marine Stewardship Council is to use its ecolabel and fishery certification program to contribute to the health of the world’s oceans by recognizing and rewarding sustainable fishing practices, influencing the choices people make when buying seafood, and working with partners to transform the seafood market to a sustainable basis.[4] Another organisation, the Aquaculture Stewardship Council, promote and certifies sustainable aquaculture.
How the MSC contributes to changes on the ocean
When buyers choose to purchase MSC certified fish, well-managed fisheries are rewarded for sustainable practices. In turn, the growing market for certified sustainable seafood generates a powerful incentive for other fisheries to demonstrate they are fishing sustainably or to improve their performance so that they too can be eligible for MSC certification. In this way, the MSC program helps to harness market forces to incentivise positive environmental change.[5]
Environmental benefits of MSC certification
A recent scientific study found that MSC certified fisheries show improvements that deliver benefits to the marine environment. Benefits included: increased stocks; improved management of stocks; reduced bycatch; expansion of environmentally protected areas; and increased knowledge about ecosystem impacts amongst fishers.[6] [7] A further study published in the scientific journal PLoS One (Ecolabel conveys reliable information on fish stock health to seafood consumers’, Gutierrez et al., 21 August 2012) found, following the first comprehensive analysis of global fish stocks targeted by MSC certified fisheries, that certified stocks are healthy and maintained above levels that ensure continuing sustainability.
Key facts and figures
The MSC was founded in 1996, inspired by the Grand Banks cod fishery collapse. In 1999 it became independent of its founding partners, the World Wide Fund for Nature and Unilever.[1] MSC has a staff of around 120 spread across the HQ in London, regional offices in London, Seattle, Singapore and Sydney, and local offices in Edinburgh, Berlin, The Hague, Paris, Cape Town, Tokyo, Reykjavik, and the Baltic region.[8]
The MSC program is open to all fisheries regardless of size, scale, location and intensity and runs a Developing World Program to ensure equal access to the program.
As of March 2013, there are over 18,000 seafood products available with the MSC ecolabel, sold in 100 countries around the world. Nearly 200 fisheries have been independently certified as meeting the MSC’s environmental standard for sustainable fishing and over 100 are currently undergoing assessment.[9] Over 2,000 companies have met the MSC Chain of Custody standard for seafood traceability (link to chain of custody section of site). The MSC works in partnership with a number of organisations, businesses and funders around the world but is fully independent of all.[2]
The MSC standard for sustainable fishing
The MSC environmental standard for sustainable fishing was developed over two years through a consultative process involving more than 300 expert organizations and individuals around the world. It is consistent with the ‘Guidelines for the Eco-labelling of Fish and Fishery Products from Marine Wild Capture Fisheries’ adopted by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in 2005.[10]
MSC principles of sustainability
The MSC standard consists of three core principles that each fishery must demonstrate it meets:
- Principle 1: Sustainable fish stocks
The fishing activity must be at a level which is sustainable for the targeted fish population. Any certified fishery must operate so that fishing can continue indefinitely and is not overexploiting the resources.
- Principle 2: Minimising environmental impact
Fishing operations should be managed to maintain the structure, productivity, function and diversity of the ecosystem on which the fishery depends.
- Principle 3: Effective management
The fishery must meet all local, national and international laws and must have a management system in place to respond to changing circumstances and maintain sustainability.
How sustainability is measured
Under the three principles are a total of 31 performance indicators that a fishery is scored against by an independent team of experts. The minimum passing score for each of the 31 performance indicators is set at a level which gives a good level of assurance that the productivity of all key elements of the ecosystem on which the fishery has an impact are not compromised. The MSC system therefore not only takes into account the impact of the fishery on the target stock, but also other vital components of the wider ecosystem, such as habitat structure, productivity and biodiversity. This minimum level equates to a score of 60 and if the fishery scores below 60 on any one of the 31 Performance Indicators it is an automatic failure. However, achieving only the minimum, 60 performance level is not adequate to become certified against the MSC standard; average scores of at least 80 for the Performance Indicators under each of the three principles have to be achieved. As a result, every fishery certified against the MSC standard is operating at a very high level of precaution. This means the fishery is more resilient to potential changes such as natural stock fluctuations, and better able to secure its long-term sustainability.[11]
Fisheries that want certification and to use the ecolabel pay US$20,000 to more than $100,000 to an independent, for-profit contractor that assesses the fishery against the MSC standard and determines whether to recommend certification.[12] The assessors are independently accredited to perform MSC assessments by Accreditation Services International (ASI). After certification, fisheries undergo annual audits costing $75,000 per audit and are recertified every five years.[12]
Encouraging further improvement in fisheries
Because a certified fishery must achieve average scores of at least 80 across the three principles it is possible for a fishery to be certified with a score of between 60 and 80 for a small number of performance indicators. In these cases it is called a conditional certification: conditions are placed on the fishery, which it must fulfil within a set period, in order to remain certified. Even though the fishery is operating sustainably, it must introduce a plan of action that will raise its performance to the more precautionary level demanded by the MSC standard by increasing any score of between 60 and 80 to at least 80 within a set period of time. In almost all cases, scores of 80 have to be achieved for all performance indicators by the end of the first certificate period (five years).
To remain certified, fisheries also have to undertake an annual surveillance to check that they continue to meet the MSC standard. After 5 years, the fishery must be reassessed in full if it wants to continue to be certified.
The MSC and aquaculture
The Marine Stewardship Council is a program for wild fisheries and does not include aquaculture production.
Some types of ‘enhanced fisheries’ can be certified but there is a well-defined type of enhancement to which the MSC standard for sustainability can be applied:
- The fishery must rely on catching fish from the wild at some stage, either Catch and Grow or Hatch and Catch.
- Species must be native to the geographic region of the fishery.
- It is not possible to substantially augment the fishes’ food or give them medicines (except in the case of Hatch and Catch fisheries such as salmon hatcheries, where the fry are reared only to a small size prior to release to the wild).
- Habitat can be modified but it must be possible to reverse the impact the enhanced fishery has on the habitats and wider ecosystem.[13]
Stakeholder input into fisheries assessments
To ensure a robust assessment and to ensure that the independent team of experts has all the available information on the fishery, the assessment process is open to a range of stakeholders to participate – this could be other fisheries, NGOs, governments, or other bodies.
Stakeholders are invited to participate in the process from the outset, and throughout the assessment, stakeholders are given the opportunity to submit information and comment on reports, all of which are made public and available for anyone to see on the MSC website.[14]
Governance
The MSC is governed by a Board of Trustees of up to 15 members. In addition a Technical Advisory Board and a Stakeholder Council advise the Board. The structure of these bodies involves a wide range of stakeholders with different views so that decisions reflect many sectors and interests.[15]
The Board sets the strategic direction of the MSC, monitors progress and ensures the MSC meets its objectives. The MSC Technical Advisory Board is made up of 15 experts in the fields of marine science, policy and seafood supply chains: it advises the MSC Board on technical and scientific matters. The MSC Stakeholder Council ensures that the opinions of all groups with a stake in sustainable fishing and seafood supply are heard by the MSC Board. It comprises 30-50 members that represent a broad range of sectors and geographical areas including fishing organisations, NGOs, consumer groups, retailers, and others.
Through these bodies, the MSC is continually improving its program, and stakeholders are invited to contribute to its development through regular meetings of the Stakeholder Council and public consultations.
Ensuring seafood purchased is from a sustainable fishery
The MSC manages a second standard called Chain of Custody for traceability. If seafood is to be sold with the MSC ecolabel, every business in the supply chain must be assessed and certified by an independent body against the MSC Chain of Custody standard. This ensures that only seafood from a certified sustainable fishery is sold with the MSC label.[16]
Finances
The MSC is a registered charity [17] and non-profit organisation [18] and depends on various sources of funding. From 1 April 2011 to 31 March 2012, the MSC’s total income was £15 million. Total expenditure for the same period was £12 million. The MSC Board recognises it as generally good practice to hold reserves as a protection against any financial difficulties in the future. A reserves target of 6 to 9 months’ cover is considered to be necessary, at least as an aspiration, given the MSC’s absence of a subscribing membership and uncertainty, as a market-based program, of its various income streams.[19]
Independent opinion and criticism
In 2009 Greenpeace published a comprehensive assessment of the MSC. Overall the report states several positive effects, but also many aspects that make the MSC a weak certification.[20]
Jared Diamond's 2005 book Collapse discussed MSC and the similar Forest Stewardship Council as good examples of collaboration among environmentalists and businesses for a sustainable economy.[21]
Andrew Balmford’s book Wild Hope (Chicago University Press, 2012) devotes a chapter to the MSC as a successful strategy for achieving conservation goals through a collaborative, market-based solution.
Since 2009, the MSC has been criticized for certifying fisheries that have, in the view of some, questionable sustainability. The most controversial certification has been that of the Ross Sea Antarctic toothfish fishery.[22][23] Some scientists and stakeholders in the seafood industry consider the fishery "exploratory", since so little is known about it.[22][24] However toothfish has been fished commercially for over 30 years and the fishery has been closely managed by Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources since 1982.[25] Scientists had accused the assessor, which recommended the fishery for certification, of ignoring unfavorable data. The independent adjudicator later sent back the recommendation for certification to the assessor for reconsideration.[12] The fishery was certified with adjustments to the scoring on the contested indicators and additional requirements for providing scientific data to aid research on toothfish stocks.
The MSC received criticism from Greenpeace and the Pew Environment Group among others over its certification of Antarctic krill. Although the fishery may have been healthy, critics believed that "scientific data on the fishery’s impact [wa]s lacking, and that the council’s decision [wa]s thus based on guesswork". As a result, Whole Foods Market stated it would stop selling all krill oil supplements even with the ecolabel.[12]
As part of the MSC certification the krill fishery committed to further scientific research and 100% observer coverage, specifically addressing the concerns about risks posed to other species by krill fishing.[26] Fishing pressure on krill is very low – less than 1% of estimated biomass - and the management rules established by CCAMLR ensure fishing activities minimise risks to the krill population or other species.[27]
In early 2010, the MSC was criticised by environmental groups like the Sierra Club for certifying the British Columbia sockeye salmon fishery[28][29][30] when stocks in the Fraser River (a part of the fishery) had been in decline since the early 1990s.[31] The year before, the salmon run of the Fraser River (a part of the fishery) was only 1.4 million (M) of a predicted 11 M salmon and had prompted the Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper to launch a judicial enquiry.[32] The 2010 run was 30 M and the 2011 run is estimated to be greater than 4 M.[33] The Fraser Sockeye 2010 think tank at Simon Fraser University stated that the large 2010 run was due mainly to the cyclical peak of fish from the Adams River and that returns were high only for a subset of tributaries.[34] However, it stated that "the large unresolved uncertainties […] highlight our collective uncertainty about the relative roles of climate change, aquaculture, and fisheries management in determining salmon returns".[34]
An appropriate management response to the decreased stocks was taken and the fishery was closed to allow the stocks to recover. The fishery is now operating successfully and has an ongoing commitment to protecting weak populations and decreasing bycatch. Catch level is set in-season in accordance with each year's run size.[35]
In February 2011, several European WWF chapters objected to certification of the Denmark North Sea plaice fishery.[36] The concerns raised were taken into account and the fishery concerned implemented a habitat strategy to ensure enhanced protection of vulnerable habitats through measures such as closed areas, gear modifications, technical developments and targeted research.[37]
However, in an independent study of seven different seafood ecolabelling and certification programs, commissioned by WWF International and carried out by Accenture Development Partnerships in 2010, the MSC ranked highest across all 103 criteria. The study was repeated in 2012 and the MSC again was determined ‘best in class’, scoring twice as highly as the next nearest certification program analysed.
Some scientists like Sidney Holt and Daniel Pauly have suggested that a system where assessments are carried out by commercial contractors paid by the fisheries creates a conflict of interest because assessors have an financial incentive in recommending fisheries and getting more work and profits from the resulting annual audits.[24] However, the practice of companies paying external auditors for assessments to independent standards (such as accounting or quality standards) is widespread throughout all business and non-profit sectors. Third party assessment by accredited certifiers, independent of the standard setter, is also a key feature of the United Nations FAO guidelines on ecolabelling fisheries and fish products, and one of the criteria that the global community of MSC stakeholders value in the MSC program.[12]
References
- 1 2 "MSC history". Retrieved 2015-12-29.
- 1 2 "MSC in numbers — MSC". Msc.org. 2013-03-21. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "MSC standards — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Vision and mission — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Our theory of change — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ Erik Stokstad (2011-11-11). "Science | From AAAS". M.sciencemag.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Environmental impacts of the MSC program — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Offices and staff — MSC". Msc.org. 2012-06-29. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Certified fisheries on the map — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Guidelines for the Ecolabelling of Fish and Fishery Products from Marine Capture Fisheries. Revision 1. / Directives pour l'étiquetage écologique du poisson et des produits des pêches de capture marines. Révision 1. / Directrices para el ecoetiquetado de pescado y productos pesqueros de la pesca de captura marina. Revisión 1. /". Fao.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "MSC environmental standard for sustainable fishing — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Jolly, David (23 June 2010). "Certification of Krill Harvest Upsets Conservationists". The New York Times. p. 6.
- ↑ "MSC Board statement on aquaculture — MSC". Msc.org. 2008-06-16. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Have your say — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Structure — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "MSC chain of custody standard for seafood traceability — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Charity overview". Charity-commission.gov.uk. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Nonprofit Report for Marine Stewardship Council". .guidestar.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ "Our finances — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/Global/usa/report/2009/7/assessment-of-the-msc.pdf
- ↑ Diamond, Jared (2011). Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail Or Succeed. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-670-03337-5. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
- 1 2 Smith, Lewis (6 January 2011). "Sustainable fish customers 'duped' by Marine Stewardship Council". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 5 December 2011.
- ↑ Amélie Lescroël and Sylvain Angerand, Pêche durable : MSC, l'écolabel qui encourage le massacre / Durable fishing: MSC, the ecolabel that promotes the massacre, Rue89 Planète.
- 1 2 Jacquet, J.; Pauly, D.; Ainley, D.; Holt, S.; Dayton, P.; Jackson, J. (2010). "Seafood stewardship in crisis". Nature 467 (7311): 28–29. doi:10.1038/467028a. PMID 20811437.
- ↑ Archived 22 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ "Sustainability notes — MSC". Msc.org. 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ Archived 4 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Hume, Mark (6 July 2010). "Sustainable sockeye ‘eco-fraud'". The Globe and Mail (Toronto). Retrieved 5 December 2011.
- ↑ "MSC criticised for sockeye certification." Fish Information and Services
- ↑ "Response to Sockeye Certification by the Marine Stewardship Council" (PDF) (Press release). Sierra Club BC. 2010. Retrieved Dec 5, 2011.
- ↑ Casselman, Anne (May 5, 2011). "Upstream Battle: What Is Killing Off the Fraser River's Sockeye Salmon?". Scientific American. ISSN 0036-8733. Retrieved 5 December 2011.
- ↑ AFP (6 November 2009). "Missing salmon stocks to be probed: PM". Fish Info & Services. Agence France-Presse. Archived from the original on 23 November 2009. Retrieved 5 December 2011.
- ↑ Canadian Press (August 13, 2011). "Up to 4 million sockeye expected in run". CBC News (Toronto). Canadian Press. Retrieved 5 December 2011.
- 1 2 Steering Committee (December 6, 2010). Fraser Sockeye 2010: Findings of a Scientists' Think Tank (PDF). Fraser Sockeye 2010. Speaking for the Salmon Program at Simon Fraser University. Retrieved 5 December 2011.
- ↑ "British Columbia sockeye salmon: the fishers' story — MSC". Msc.org. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
- ↑ Holland, Richard (11 February 2011). "Objection: Denmark North Sea Plaice Trawl Fishery" (PDF). Memo to MSC. Marine Stewardship Council. Retrieved 5 December 2011.
- ↑ "Danish North Sea plaice trawl fishery receives MSC certificate — MSC". Msc.org. 2011-06-10. Retrieved 2013-04-06.
External links
- Marine Stewardship Council
- MSC website for teachers and children
- Where to buy MSC-labelled seafood
- MSC profile on database of Market Governance Mechanisms
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