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Whole Foods To Stop Unsustainable Wild-Caught Seafood Sales By Earth Day

By MICHAEL HILL 03/30/12 08:31 AM ET AP

ALBANY, N.Y. -- Whole Foods Market said Friday that it will stop selling fish caught from depleted waters or through ecologically damaging methods, a move that comes as supermarkets nationwide try to make their seafood selections more sustainable.

Starting Earth Day, April 22, the natural and organic supermarket chain will no longer carry wild-caught seafood that is "red-rated," a color code that indicates it is either overfished or caught in a way that harms other species. The ratings are determined by the Blue Ocean Institute, an advocacy group, and the Monterey Bay Aquarium in California.

Among the seafood disappearing from Whole Foods shelves will be octopus, gray sole, skate, Atlantic halibut and Atlantic cod caught by trawls, which can destroy habitats. The company will stock sustainable replacements like cod caught on lines and halibut from the Pacific.

"In the long term, what we're really looking to do is help reverse trends of overfishing and bi-catch, so that really we can move the industry as a whole toward greater sustainability," said seafood quality standards coordinator Carrie Brownstein. She added that Whole Foods is making the shift a year ahead of its internal deadline.

Retail prices could be higher in some cases in which sustainable suppliers have lower yields.

Whole Foods, which has been strengthening its buying practices for years, is among a number of supermarket chains responding as consumers become more concerned about the sources of their seafood.

In the past month, BJ's Wholesale Club announced a policy to ensure its seafood is sustainable or on track to meet sustainability standards by 2014, and Supervalu announced a comprehensive policy to ensure its farm-raised seafood is sustainable. Supervalu, which operates Albertsons, Shop `n Save and seven other retail brands, also stopped selling six wild-caught species because of sustainability concerns.

The changes have come fast. In 2008, when Greenpeace first published its seafood sustainability scorecard of supermarkets, all 20 of the major chains surveyed failed. Last year, 15 of 20 companies had passing scores, said John Hocevar, the environmental group's oceans campaign director.

"It's pretty impressive to see that it was an issue that really wasn't on most of these companies' radar," Hocevar said, "and with encouragement from us and many others, they really did for the most part step up."

Greenpeace is among a number of private groups that certify or offer guidelines for seafood, meaning consumers sometimes must sort out multiple ratings.

For instance, some Whole Foods seafood will continue to feature labels from the Marine Stewardship Council, which maintains a widely used system that certifies seafood from sustainable fisheries. But Brownstein said the council doesn't assess every fishery, so Whole Foods relies on the color coding for seafood from fisheries not covered by the council. Whole Foods will now only sell green- and yellow-rated seafood, which is more sustainable.

Shrimp, salmon and other seafood grown on farms have yet another separate labeling system.

Hocevar said the profusion of ratings can confuse customers, which is why Greenpeace urges supermarkets to only sell sustainable products.

Also on HuffPost:

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ALBANY, N.Y. -- Whole Foods Market said Friday that it will stop selling fish caught from depleted waters or through ecologically damaging methods, a move that comes as supermarkets nationwide try to ...
ALBANY, N.Y. -- Whole Foods Market said Friday that it will stop selling fish caught from depleted waters or through ecologically damaging methods, a move that comes as supermarkets nationwide try to ...
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11:21 AM on 04/02/2012
yet they will continue to sell you faux organic in their 365 brand with veg from china! they also claim this in their "california mix" vegetable bags when in fact they are from china and no they are not certified organic
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06:51 PM on 04/03/2012
That was so 2010
08:36 PM on 04/01/2012
Support American fisherman...they are quickly being eliminated over foolishness that OUR government over regulates...I refuse to eat any sea food from a third world country. For all I know,, they raise seafood in bung ditches.
11:15 AM on 04/01/2012
Thank you.
09:28 AM on 04/01/2012
I think its up to the Lord to decide and not Whole Foods. Remember Jesus said "Let a man fish".

I went into Hole Food once and ran out after too minutes. Saw a bunch of freeks with pink hair and tatoos and all kinds of nuts and bolts stickin outta there skin. Look like a bunch of walkin roadkill.
11:17 AM on 04/01/2012
You must not have gone to the one next to Duke University. Jethro, I think deep inside you want pink hair and are very depressed that you have not come out of the closet yet. Be proud of who you are and embrace those who are different then you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DandaPanda
I am not a republican
08:40 AM on 04/02/2012
You teabaggers think frozen taquitos and jello are a nutritionally complete meal once you add ketchup. Whole Foods is a good store with good products and their 365 house brqand is very affordable.
But go ahead and keep buying food at the dollar store if that is what makes you happy.
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Rich Cash
Enlisted in 1971 - Retired in 1996
10:15 PM on 03/31/2012
What about Red Snapper? These fish are strictly "catch and release" in Florida, yet you can readily buy Red Snapper at almost every grocery store in America and in most of the seafood restaurant chains.
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French Toast
MAPLE SYRUP
08:49 PM on 03/31/2012
America hardly matters. If we could ween Asia off of fish somehow, that'd be great.
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hcwcars
Never going back to the old days
06:31 PM on 03/31/2012
My bet is they will be fishing off the coast of japan !
06:29 PM on 03/31/2012
Thank you Whole Foods.
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whyworry
Proud Liberal
04:30 PM on 03/31/2012
Love Whole Foods...my store...
09:55 AM on 04/01/2012
Mine too. Great place.
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whyworry
Proud Liberal
10:21 AM on 04/01/2012
I lunch there everyday...lol...
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view from the veranda
jus' trying to make sense of it all...
01:47 PM on 03/31/2012
Whole Foods came to our town and put numerous small health food business in jeopardy. They became the largest store in our small town. We live next to the ocean but even our fish have been depleted. Small kid time we use to be fed from our ocean "refrigerator". I've seen the wastefulness close up. Dad says we should catch only what you'll eat. What to do?
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Carachama
I'm not apt to follow blindly the lead of others
09:55 AM on 03/31/2012
Good move, but its kind of hopeless. The US market is tiny. If you go to Asia, you will see just how unsustainable fisheries are.
08:54 AM on 03/31/2012
This is an outrage!~ As a human it is my divine right to eat whatever I want! I want my Tuna, all of it, and I want it now!
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rcapitalsim
RYAN
07:32 AM on 03/31/2012
whats whole foods?
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06:55 PM on 04/03/2012
some kind a store i think
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07:30 AM on 03/31/2012
Unfortunately they are not addressing the farm raised seafood as well. Farm raised seafood is not good other unless they are raised eating natural food they would find in the ocean. Most of these farms are feeding the fish corn, which the last time I checked corn doesn't seem to grow in any ocean. Farm raised talipia is absolutely worthless to be eating, it contains zero nutritional value.

I am all for making sure you buy seafood from companies who are responsible in the care of the ocean, however both issues must be dealt with at the same time.
07:18 AM on 04/01/2012
I'm with you. Down with corn fed animals which are less nutritionally valuable, both from the ocean and from the land. End corn subsidies and that will quickly put a stop to corn as livestock feed.
11:46 PM on 04/01/2012
It's not hard. Simply buy grass fed beef.
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Connie Markley Boppre
05:41 AM on 03/31/2012
whole foods rocks. my niece works for them. they are continually doing things to improve the communicity as well. beach clean ups, etc. !