British supermarkets have been criticised for selling thousands of tonnes of seafood of Russian origin which had been imported to Britain last year.
As The Times UK reports, major retailers including Sainsbury’s, Morrisons, Asda, Aldi, Lidl and the Co-Op sold fish “originally produced” in Russia after the majority of supermarkets pledged to remove Russian-made products following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
It quotes data from the Ocean Disclosure Project (ODP), which was initiated by Sustainable Fish Partnership (SFP) in 2015 as a reporting framework for seafood companies.
Retailers, suppliers, fish feed manufacturers are invited to voluntarily disclose their wild-caught seafood sourcing alongside information on the environmental performance of each source.
National Federation of Fishermen’s Organisations chief executive Mike Cohen said that “retailers have been willing to turn a blind eye to the true source of fish ‘processed’, however minimally, in a third country, in order to obscure its origins in the Russian fishing fleet”.
Cohen told the newspaper it is “truly shameful”.
Separate trade data provided to British seafood authority Seafish by Trade Data Monitor showed that 3,822 tonnes of fish and shellfish products imported into Britain last year were reported as being “originally produced” in Russia.
Almost all were consigned from the Netherlands.
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