Aquaculture

Global Sustainability Standards Created for Bivalve Aquaculture Industry


© New Zealand Seafood Industry Council

In 2007, 30 people met in the United States to begin to develop global standards for filter-feeding bivalves: clams, oysters, scallops and mussels. Over a three-year period, almost 400 additional people joined the discussion. Their work ended in August 2010, when the first set of credible global standards for the bivalve aquaculture industry was published. WWF led this initiative. The final standards will help transform an industry responsible for producing approximately 25 percent of the world’s farmed seafood.

The group – called the Bivalve Aquaculture Dialogue – that created the standards was motivated by the need to minimize the potential negative impacts of bivalve farming and to give bivalve producers a means to verify the sustainability of their farming operations. The impacts associated with this type of farming include the introduction of exotic pests and pathogens into the ocean and bays, as well as conflicts that sometimes arise with neighboring communities over the shared use of coastal resources. For the most part, however, bivalve production has a positive impact on the environment. Filter feeders, like mussels and oysters, help improve water quality by removing excess nutrients.

Bivalve farmers who adopt the standards will earn a label from a new entity, the Aquaculture Stewardship Council, certifying that their seafood was raised in an environmentally-friendly and socially-responsible way.

For more information: 

Download the standards
Download the auditor guidance document
Read the press release

We thank the following individuals, all who were on the Dialogue’s Global Steering Committee, for their commitment to spearheading this initiative:

Bill Dewey: Taylor Shellfish
Peter Cranford: Bedford Institute of Oceanography
Bob Rheault: East Coast Shellfish Growers Association
Mike Mandeno: Aquaculture New Zealand
Ken Grange: National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (New Zealand)
Francene Wineti: Te Ohu Kai Moana
Aad Smaal: Wageningen University
Paddy Walker: The Wadden Sea Society
Tom Pickerell and David Jarrad: Shellfish Association of Great Britain
Antonio Hervas: Global Trust Certification
Corey Peet: The David Suzuki Foundation
Sandy Shumway: University of Connecticut
Colin Brannen: WWF

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Jose Villalon

Director
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"Farmed fish is an excellent source of protein and, when produced well, helps protect the environment. I am totally convinced that aquaculture is the most sustainable way to feed the world."

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