Ndira Keller – Von Keller Blog https://www.blog.von-keller.org Von Keller News Blog Thu, 16 Mar 2023 14:44:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://www.blog.von-keller.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/cropped-favicon-Von-Keller-blog-32x32.png Ndira Keller – Von Keller Blog https://www.blog.von-keller.org 32 32 None of the tuna retailers in the United States passed the sustainability and human rights tests. https://www.blog.von-keller.org/food-health/none-of-the-tuna-retailers-in-the-united-states-passed-the-sustainability-and-human-rights-tests/ https://www.blog.von-keller.org/food-health/none-of-the-tuna-retailers-in-the-united-states-passed-the-sustainability-and-human-rights-tests/#respond Thu, 16 Mar 2023 14:43:14 +0000 https://www.blog.von-keller.org/?p=1703

None of the tuna retailers in the United States passed the sustainability and human rights tests.

Tuna production is at an all-time high. Part of this increase can be attributed to it being viewed as an environmentally friendly alternative to other animal proteins for people looking to reduce their meat consumption.

However, according to a new report by the environmental NGO Greenpeace,” High cost for cheap tuna“, despite significant progress, U.S. grocery chains still have a long way to go in addressing serious environmental and human rights concerns in their tuna sourcing.

In accordance with the report, the United States is the world’s second-largest tuna importer, and its retailers utilize significant clout in the $42 billion global tuna sector. Since 2008, Greenpeace has ranked US seafood retailers based on sustainability criteria. This is the second report of its kind to include human rights considerations.

The report’s authors created a scorecard for the 16 largest U.S. grocery retailers based on their tuna sourcing practices. To accomplish this, they distributed a survey, which 11 of the retailers completed

and returned, and relied on publicly available data for the remaining five. They assigned percentage academic results to retailers based on 39 questions grouped into six categories: purchasing policy, record keeping, advocacy and initiatives, human rights and labor protections, current sourcing, and customer education and labeling.

picture of tuna at grocery store

Retailers with high ratings are still rated too low.

The report praised ALDI for its “comprehensive, publicly available seafood and human rights policies” and explicit advocacy “for a living wage for workers in its supply chain.” The limited scope of its grievance mechanisms and the fact that its corporate responsibility supplier evaluation program is still in development lowered its score.

Southeastern Grocers, the parent company of Fresco y Más, Harveys Supermarket, and Winn-Dixie, received the lowest human rights rating.

Transshipment is the practice of offloading a fishing vessel’s catch onto other boats that deliver it to shore. It is frequently associated with illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing, and because it allows fishing vessels to stay at sea for extended periods of time, it also increases the risk of human and labor rights violations in supply chains.

Amazon-owned Whole Foods Market, the largest U.S. chain specializing in “natural” and organic foods, received the highest score of 75% for sustainability. ALDI came in second with 70%, bringing its total overall score to 62%, the first and only passing grade since the addition of human rights factors to the rankings last year. The authors lauded Whole Foods’ stringent traceability and sourcing standards, including its pledge to sell only pole-and-line and hand-line-caught canned tuna. These methods reduce bycatch and overfishing more than other methods, and they benefit human rights because vessels are smaller and tend to work along the coast rather than in the open ocean, resulting in shorter periods at sea and more localized employment.

Costco was ranked second-to-last in terms of sustainability, with a score of 32%. Critics focused on its “vague” sourcing and seafood sustainability policies, as well as its lack of a transshipment policy.

Should we phaseout transshipment

According to Greenpeace research, this frequently results in tuna products with suspicious environmental and social qualifications being available on supermarket shelves in the United States, despite grocery chains’ assurances to the contrary. According to the news release, Greenpeace linked tuna caught by vessels that supply the ubiquitous canned-tuna brand Bumble Bee to forced labor, human trafficking, and IUU fishing practices in 2020, and then traced the tuna to a Kroger-owned Harris Teeter in Arlington, Virginia.

The report calls for increased tracking and tracing and openness in the tuna supply chain. It requests that retailers follow the example of employee-owned supermarket chain Hy-Vee (which ranked fourth overall in the report) and make a complete list of their supplying vessels public. It also wants to ban transshipment.

Von Keller Blog is an informational website with public news, company insights and reports of our companies events, news, press and blogging. Let’s Chat.

fish on ground in china market
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A Cluster of Seaweed Is En Route To The Florida Coast. https://www.blog.von-keller.org/news/a-cluster-of-seaweed-is-en-route-to-the-florida-coast/ Wed, 15 Mar 2023 23:20:19 +0000 https://www.blog.von-keller.org/?p=1590

A Swarm Of Seaweed Is En Route To the Florida Coast.

A 5,000-mile-wide mass of macroalgae known as sargassum is making its way to Florida, but it’s unclear where it will end up. 

Sargassum is a genus of brown macroalgae or seaweed that is found all over the world, but especially abundantly in the Sargasso Sea in the Atlantic Ocean. The massive seaweed drift is not a new phenomenon. 

Researchers began to notice explosive growth in the belt, known as the Great Sargassum belt, in 2011, which was thought to be caused by excess fertilizer, raw sewage, and soil runoff.

This winter, the floating mass, which stretches from Africa to Florida in the Atlanta Ocean, grew even more alarmingly.

According to Brian Lapointe, an algae specialist and research professor at Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, “this year could be the biggest year yet,” even bigger than previous upticks.

The algae is currently washing up in the Florida Keys, Barbados, and other parts of the region, but researchers are unsure where the majority of it will end up.

The massive seaweed bloom is just one example of a growing global invasion of macro and microscopic algal blooms thriving in freshwater and marine ecosystems on an increasing supply of nutrients such as nitrogen.

 

Play Video

Video Source: CBS Miami 

What is causing the most subsequent bloom?

According to a recent Nature study on coastal phytoplankton, algal blooms have been linked to human activities. Lawn fertilizers, wastewater, and agricultural runoff all contribute to the pollution of rivers, lakes, and oceans.

The flow of sargassum from the Mississippi River, extreme flooding in the Amazon basin, and the mouth of the Congo, where upwelling and vertical mixing of the ocean can bring up nutrients that feed the blooms. According to the experts it’s deforestation and the  burning of the forest that could play a role.

Is climate change having an impact on algae blooms?

The authors of an article called “Harmful Algae” Brian E. Lapointe *, Laura W. Herren, David D. Debortoli, Margaret A. Vogel discovered the following:

  1. In some areas,Nutrient pollutions can be  a link between changes in sea surface temperature and ocean circulation.
  2. Warmer temperatures correlated with blooms in high-latitude areas like Alaska and the Baltic Sea.
  3. Climate change has the potential to alter ocean circulation and the movement of nutrients that support phytoplankton blooms.
  4. El Nino and other global climate events have also been linked to bloom frequency and movement.
  5. Warmer temperatures have increased algal bloom-favorable seasons in temperate seas.

Where is sargassum going?

There is know way to know for sure because winds, currents play major role, and even small storms can all have an impact on where the sargassum moves. 

Von Keller Blog is an informational website with public news, company insights and reports of our companies events, news, press and blogging. Let’s Chat.

Courtesy Yahoo News.

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In a “World-First” Procedure, Elderly Penguins Receive Custom Lenses. https://www.blog.von-keller.org/news/elderly-penguins-receive-custom-lenses/ Wed, 15 Mar 2023 07:25:32 +0000 https://www.blog.von-keller.org/2017/12/25/racers-rated-how-the-formula-one-drivers-performed-in-2017/

In a "world-first" procedure, elderly penguins receive custom lenses.

The Mandai Wildlife Reserve announced Tuesday that three elderly penguins from a Singapore zoo underwent successful cataract surgery and received new custom-made lenses, marking the first time the procedure has been performed on the animals.

Six penguins from Jurong Bird Park underwent surgery to “enhance their sight and improve their quality of life,” which included the removal of cloudy lenses caused by cataracts. Only three king penguins received the artificial lens.

The procedure was chosen for king penguins because they are a larger species with eyes that are large and stable enough to hold the custom lenses in place. The lenses were custom-made in Germany to fit each penguin’s eye based on their measurements, and the process took about two months.

The penguins recovered completely two months after the procedures and are now back with their colony in Jurong Bird Park. Dr. Ellen Rasidi, a veterinarian with the Mandai Wildlife Group, said in a statement that all of the penguins are doing well.

Source: Mandai Wildlife Reserve Instagram

Von Keller Blog is an informational website with public news, company insights and reports of our companies events, news, press and blogging. Let’s Chat.

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