Adopt a Whale

Adopt a Whale

Make a symbolic Rhino adoption to help save some of the world's most endangered animals from extinction and support WWF's conservation efforts.
Adopt Now!

Wave Forward

Read about WWF's work to conserve our planet's vital marine environments and learn what you can do to help

Learn more.

Conservation Firsthand

Conservation Firsthand

Join WWF experts as they share their on-the-ground experiences in the places we're striving to save.
Learn more

Take Action

Travel

Join WWF's Conservation Action Network and speak out for wildlife and wild places around the globe. Learn more

Travel

Travel

Travel With WWF

Visit our travel section and choose from many amazing trips! Learn more

SUPPORT WWF

chasepromo

Sign up for a WWF Visa, and Chase will contribute $50 for each new WWF account opened and activated online.
Learn more

Digg

Aquaculture

What we are doing

Aerators operating in an aquaculture pond to ensure water is oxygenated
© René Benguerel

Through a series of roundtables, called Aquaculture Dialogues, WWF works with farmers, retailers, NGOs, scientists and other aquaculture industry stakeholders worldwide to develop standards for certifying aquaculture products. The standards will mimimize the key environmental and social impacts associated with aquaculture.

More than two dozen standards or certification programs for aquaculture exist. However, none of the programs are effective at making the aquaculture industry more sustainable. The standards created by the Aquaculture Dialogues will be credible because they will be:

  • Science-based: The Dialogue standards are being developed with input from the world’s leading aquaculture scientists and will be updated over time to reflect the newest scientific findings.
  • Performance-based: The standards will not tell producers what practices to use to reduce or eliminate the impacts of aquaculture. Rather, the standards will provide targets to reach if producers want to address the impacts. How they do so will be their choice. This will encourage innovation and continual improvement on the farm.
  • Metrics-based. By being measurable, the standards will be objective and, therefore, more credible.
  • Created by a diverse and balanced group of stakeholders. More than 1,000 people are participating in the Dialogues because they want something different – and more sustainable – than what is out there. They have a stake in the outcome.
  • Focused on minimizing or eliminating the key environmental and social impacts of aquaculture, not a laundry list of impacts.
  • Compliant with the International Social and Environmental Accreditation and Labeling Alliance.

The goal of the Dialogues is to create standards for at least 12 aquaculture species by the end of 2009. The standards will be given to a new or existing standards-holding entity that will use third party auditors to certify farms.

The Aquaculture Dialogues build off of previous work done by WWF. Since the early 1990s, WWF has spearheaded the creation of certification programs for forestry (the Forestry Stewardship Council), fisheries (the Marine Stewardship Council), agriculture (Protected Harvest) and climate (the Climate Savers Program).

 

Learn more

For more information, please contact us at aquacultureinfo@wwfus.org

 

email page    Please leave this field empty

Where In The World?

Click the globe