Fresh report warns fish fraud extends to one fifth of global catch

Fish fraud is widespread in markets, grocers and restaurants around the world, but a growing number of innovative tools are turning the tide, according to a new report published on Tuesday by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)

In 2011, a trafficker in Chile was convicted for recruiting economically vulnerable Peruvian citizens and arranging for them to be brought into the country destined to become victims of sexual exploitation

Last year,one in fivepeople who dealt with a public official were asked to pay a bribe, according to a UN report The world is doing something about it

While t is no official estimate of how prevalent fraud is in the $195 billion global fisheries and aquaculture sector, empirical studies suggest that 20 per cent of the trade may be subject to some type of fraud, according toFAO

Menu of misinformation

Some studies suggest that up to 30 per cent of seafood products may be mislabelled in restaurants, with the report citing cases from around the world, from ceviche stands in Latin America and seafood eateries in China to canned tuna products in the European Union

While as much as one third of aquatic products sold in the United States may not conform to package descriptions, less than one per cent of imports are tested, the report warned

What drives fish fraud?

Economic incentives are the most widespread driver of fish fraud

Selling Atlantic salmon, almost all of which is farmed, as Pacific salmon, most of which is wild caught, delivers a nearly $10 benefit per kilogramme

Some fraud occurs to mask the geographic provenance of a product or to suppress evidence of above-quota landings, which may pose risks to the sustainability of fishery stocks

Finding fraud

Fish fraud is defined in the report as a deliberate practice intended to deceive others andcan pose risks to biodiversity, human health or economic systems, according to, produced by FAO through cooperation between its Fisheries and Aquaculture Division and the Joint FAO/IAEACentre of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture

The main categories of fish fraud are:

  • adding water to unprocessed fishery products to bolster weight and price
  • adulteration (adding colouring to make tuna look fresher)
  • counterfeiting (imitation shrimp made from starch-based compounds)
  • simulation (packaging surimi to seem like crab meat)
  • diversion (distributing legitimate products outside of their intended markets)
  • misbranding (such as incorrect claims about sustainability)
  • overrun (involving overfishing)
  • species substitution (selling tilapia as red snapper)
  • tampering and mislabelling (involving origins and even expiry dates)
  • plain theft

Meanwhile, the human welfare risks of some seafood fraud are evident as some fish pose risks when eaten raw, while re-freezing seafood increases the risk of bacterial growth

Catching fishy business

The global scale of fish consumptiontargeting over 12,000 seafood speciesthe diversity of fraud type and the lack of standardised regulatory or legal definitions, make global estimates difficult to assess, but t are novel ways to tackle the scourge

Advanced laboratory tests can be effective in identifying substances, but access to these methods is limited

Meanwhile, the report shows that portable X-ray fluorescence and machine-learning models are innovations that could help cut fraud and make regulations more enforceable

To quash fish fraud, the new report advocates for:

  • harmonised labelling requirements
  • mandatory inclusion of scientific names w possible
  • better traceability systems

Adding science to the tacklebox

Given its complexity, identifying the crime is not straightforward, but the report goes into considerable detail about how advances in science can contribute to tackling fraud, including:

  • A standard method to determine whether and how many times a seafood product has been frozen has so far proven elusive, but differences in the fatty-acid composition of wild and farmed fish may be used to detect fraud

  • Carbon and nitrogen ratios to determine the geographical origin of major commercial fish species

Netting offenders

Prevention and enforcement are criticalto reduce and eventually eliminate fish and all food fraud, according to the report, which reviewed concerted efforts to tackle cases in Argentina, Italy and the United States

An investigation usingDNA-barcodingto assess the scale of mislabelling in Los Angeles, California, found that while it is quite low in processing plants, it is moderate among grocers andparticularly prevalent in sushi restaurants

A local initiative by local academia, industry, government stakeholders together with an education campaign coupled with ongoing blind tests, reduced seafood mislabelling in the focus area by two thirds over 10 years

What the UNs doing

Part of UN ongoing efforts include:

  • FAO and the Codex Alimentarius Commissionthe international food standards bodyare working on toughening international standards to combat food fraud
  • through the Joint FAO/IAEA Centre, FAO offers technical support to members that need to bolster their testing capacities

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