Aquaculture for all

MarinTrust and MSC aim to align marine ingredient standards

Feed ingredients Anchovies Capelin +4 more

MarinTrust and the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) in a bid to enhance cooperation within the marine ingredient supply chain.

Headshot of a woman.
Libby Woodhatch, executive chair of MarinTrust

The agreement aims to improve understanding of both programmes, reduce duplication, and create efficiencies for marine ingredient producers. Both organisations will explore opportunities for mutual recognition and alignment of their standards.

Libby Woodhatch, executive chair of MarinTrust, stated: “This collaboration reflects both organisations' shared commitment to improving fisheries management and addressing the increasing demand for responsible marine ingredients. This MoU aims to clarify and recognise that both programmes are complementary yet different. The complementarity enables efficiencies to be designed and offered to seafood supply chain actors”.

According to Nicolas Guichoux, chief programme officer of MSC, added: “The core of this MoU is to recognise that both programmes share an interest in positioning robust assurance – based on credible third-party certification – as the preferable tool for the marine ingredients industry to demonstrate responsible sourcing.”

Key differences between both programmes include:

1. Unit of certification

MSC fisheries certification is available for fisheries, and MSC chain of custody certification is available for processors, traders in the seafood supply chain from vessels all the way through to ‘consumer ready production’. MarinTrust’s unit of certification for its factory standard is the marine ingredients producing production facility. As a pre-requisite for an audit, a factory must demonstrate responsible sourcing, through sourcing raw material (whole fish and by-product) that is MarinTrust approved. The unit of certification for the MarinTrust chain of custody standard is the marine ingredient processing or storage facility.

2. Scope

MSC’s fisheries standard cover target stock health, ecosystem impacts, and management. MSC chain of custody covers segregation-based traceability in the supply chain. MarinTrust covers responsible sourcing and production, as well as traceability of marine ingredients. As a prerequisite to an audit and MarinTrust certification, the raw materials must be approved.

3. Position in the supply chain

MSC certification applies to all wild catch fisheries, while MarinTrust focuses specifically on marine ingredient producers. MSC and MarinTrust chain of custody can be used to cover further processing up to feed producers, pet food manufacturers, etc.

This MoU includes the exploration of various mutual recognitions and collaborations to create synergies which will help reduce complexity and duplication of efforts and therefore reduce costs for the industry.

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