WIN! Food & Water Watch and allies force cancellation of the Delaware River Basin Commission vote to allow fracking in the region. Keep up the fight… more »
X

Stay Informed

Sign up for email to learn how you can protect food and water in your community.

Spread the word

Go

Help us build our community!
Invite your friends to join FWW's list

Connect with us

Twitter Facebook RSS Flickr YouTube
I support Food & Water Watch because it is really the "watchdog" that is protecting and educating consumers one person at a time. If we each follow through with action we will change the world.
Brigid Sullivan
Share |

Country of Origin Labeling

In 2005, the U.S. Department of Agriculture established country of origin labeling (COOL) rules, which require seafood to bear a label that identifies where it is from and whether it was farm, raised or wild, caught. However, these rules do not cover all seafood.

All “processed” seafood is exempted from country of origin labeling. Processed seafood can be anything that has been altered in a substantial way, such as cooked, smoked or canned seafood, or that has been mixed with other ingredients. Examples include seafood soups, seafood medleys, fish blocks and breaded or salted seafood. Excluding processed seafood from COOL requirements is especially troubling, because this category of seafood product has a high risk of contamination. From 2003 to 2006, between 66 and 82 percent of imported seafood rejected at the border was processed. For more information, check out our report Import Alert.

Additionally, specialty seafood stores and all restaurants are exempt from COOL requirements. A significant portion of U.S. seafood consumption takes place outside of the home and therefore most consumers are not well informed about where their seafood comes from and whether it is wild caught or industrially farmed.

The USDA should expand country of origin labeling so that it includes processed seafood, and is required wherever seafood is sold. We consumers deserve this simple information that allows us to make educated decisions about what we eat.