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Shrimp's Dirty Secrets: Why America's Favorite Seafood Is a Health and Environmental Nightmare

by: Jill Richardson

Tue Jan 26, 2010 at 19:01:00 PM PST


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A while back I posted a piece called "Why You REALLY Don't Want to Eat Shrimp." It was an account of one shrimp farming method in one province of one country (India). And it was disgusting. As I started listing off the chemicals used to farm shrimp to a friend, he replied "You had me at diesel." (FYI, that was just the third chemical mentioned in a very long list.)  

The shrimp issue continued to bother me. I see otherwise eco-conscious people eating shrimp all the time, and I have been to supposedly sustainable restaurants that serve it. Was it really that bad? Then I got wind of a soon-to-be-released report from the Monterey Bay Aquarium that would have some good news about shrimp. Great! Because, of course, ethical eaters will want to know all about that. So I got in touch with Monterey Bay and ended up speaking to a senior scientist there.

The shrimp picture wasn't quite as rosy as I had hoped. The GOOD news is that things are going in the right direction. The BAD news is that we aren't yet to a place where we can supply our demand with ethically-produced shrimp, nor are we to a place where consumers can even tell the difference between what is what.  In the U.S., 85 percent of all shrimp is imported. About a third of the imports come from Thailand, but after that there's a long list of countries that supply it.

CountryPercent of U.S. Shrimp Imports in 2007Percent of U.S. Imports that were Farmed in 2006
Thailand3480.5
Ecuador1188.6
Indonesia1158.8
China926.0
Mexico770.4
Vietnam782.8
Malaysia440.3
India419.3

When you're lucky, you can find out what country your shrimp is from and maybe whether it was farmed or wild. If it was wild, it was probably caught via trawling (and that's a no-no). If it was farmed, then who knows? Maybe it was farmed in a responsible manner. Maybe it wasn't. That's the problem. So below is a piece I wrote for Alternet that was published yesterday, based in the information I found about the current state of the shrimp industry.

Jill Richardson :: Shrimp's Dirty Secrets: Why America's Favorite Seafood Is a Health and Environmental Nightmare
Originally posted on Alternet January 25, 2010  

Shrimp's Dirty Secrets: Why America's Favorite Seafood Is a Health and Environmental Nightmare  

The environmental impact of shrimp can be horrific. But most Americans don't know where their shrimp comes from or what's in it.  

In his book, Bottomfeeder: How to Eat Ethically in a World of Vanishing Seafood, Taras Grescoe paints a repulsive picture of how shrimp are farmed in one region of India. The shrimp pond preparation begins with urea, superphosphate, and diesel, then progresses to the use of piscicides (fish-killing chemicals like chlorine and rotenone), pesticides and antibiotics (including some that are banned in the U.S.), and ends by treating the shrimp with sodium tripolyphosphate (a suspected neurotoxicant), Borax, and occasionally caustic soda.

Upon arrival in the U.S., few if any, are inspected by the FDA, and when researchers have examined imported ready-to-eat shrimp, they found 162 separate species of bacteria with resistance to 10 different antibiotics. And yet, as of 2008, Americans are eating 4.1 pounds of shrimp apiece each year -- significantly more than the 2.8 pounds per year we each ate of the second most popular seafood, canned tuna. But what are we actually eating without knowing it? And is it worth the price -- both to our health and the environment?

Understanding the shrimp that supplies our nation's voracious appetite is quite complex. Overall, the shrimp industry represents a dismantling of the marine ecosystem, piece by piece. Farming methods range from those described above to some that are more benign. Problems with irresponsible methods of farming don't end at the "yuck" factor as shrimp farming is credited with destroying 38 percent of the world's mangroves, some of the most diverse and productive ecosystems on earth. Mangroves sequester vast amounts of carbon and serve as valuable buffers against hurricanes and tsunamis. Some compare shrimp farming methods that demolish mangroves to slash-and-burn agriculture. A shrimp farmer will clear a section of mangroves and close it off to ensure that the shrimp cannot escape. Then the farmer relies on the tides to refresh the water, carrying shrimp excrement and disease out to sea. In this scenario, the entire mangrove ecosystem is destroyed and turned into a small dead zone for short-term gain. Even after the shrimp farm leaves, the mangroves do not come back.

A more responsible farming system involves closed, inland ponds that use their wastewater for agricultural irrigation instead of allowing it to pollute oceans or other waterways. According to the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Seafood Watch program, when a farm has good disease management protocols, it does not need to use so many antibiotics or other chemicals.

One more consideration, even in these cleaner systems, is the wild fish used to feed farmed shrimp. An estimated average of 1.4 pounds of wild fish are used to produce every pound of farmed shrimp. Sometimes the wild fish used is bycatch -- fish that would be dumped into the ocean to rot if they weren't fed to shrimp -- but other times farmed shrimp dine on species like anchovies, herring, sardines and menhaden. These fish are important foods for seabirds, big commercial fish and whales, so removing them from the ecosystem to feed farmed shrimp is problematic.

Additionally, some shrimp are wild-caught, and while they aren't raised in a chemical cocktail, the vast majority is caught using trawling, a highly destructive fishing method. Football field-sized nets are dragged along the ocean floor, scooping up and killing several pounds of marine life for every pound of shrimp they catch and demolishing the ocean floor ecosystem as they go. Where they don't clear-cut coral reefs or other rich ocean floor habitats, they drag their nets through the mud, leaving plumes of sediment so large they are visible from outer space.

After trawling destroys an ocean floor, the ecosystem often cannot recover for decades, if not centuries or millennia. This is particularly significant because 98 percent of ocean life lives on or around the seabed. Depending on the fishery, the amount of bycatch (the term used for unwanted species scooped up and killed by trawlers) ranges from five to 20 pounds per pound of shrimp. These include sharks, rays, starfish, juvenile red snapper, sea turtles and more. While shrimp trawl fisheries only represent 2 percent of the global fish catch, they are responsible for over one-third of the world's bycatch. Trawling is comparable to bulldozing an entire section of rainforest in order to catch one species of bird.

Given this disturbing picture, how can an American know how to find responsibly farmed or fished shrimp? Currently, it's near impossible. Only 15 percent of our total shrimp consumption comes from the U.S. (both farmed and wild sources). The U.S. has good regulations on shrimp farming, so purchasing shrimp farmed in the U.S. is not a bad way to go. Wild shrimp, with a few exceptions, is typically obtained via trawling and should be avoided. The notable exceptions are spot prawns from British Columbia, caught in traps similar to those used for catching lobster, and the small salad shrimp like the Northern shrimp from the East Coast or pink shrimp from Oregon, both of which are certified as sustainable by the Marine Stewardship Council. However, neither are true substitutes for the large white and tiger shrimp American consumers are used to.

The remaining 85 percent came from other countries and about two-thirds of our imports are farmed with the balance caught in the wild, mostly via trawling. China is the world's top shrimp producer -- both farmed and wild -- but only 2 percent of China's shrimp are imported to the U.S. The world's number two producer, Thailand, is our top foreign source of shrimp. Fully one third of the shrimp the U.S. imports comes from Thailand, and over 80 percent of those shrimp are farmed.

The next biggest sources of U.S. shrimp are Ecuador, Indonesia, China, Mexico, Vietnam, Malaysia and India. Together, those countries provide nearly 90 percent of America's imported shrimp. Interestingly, Ecuador's shrimp industry exists almost entirely to supply U.S. demand, with over 93 percent of its shrimp coming up north to the U.S. The vast majority of those shrimp (almost 90 percent) are farmed. Sadly, shrimp production is responsible for the destruction of 70 percent of Ecuador's mangroves. Farming practices in other countries range from decent to awful, but there's currently no real way for a consumer to tell whether shrimp from any particular country was farmed sustainably or not.

Geoff Shester, senior science manager of Monterey Bay's Seafood Watch, says that ethical shrimp consumption is a chicken and egg problem. On one hand, the solution is for consumers to show demand for responsibly farmed and wild shrimp by eating it but on the other hand, ethical shrimp choices are not yet widely available. Seafood Watch is working with some of the largest seafood buyers in the U.S. to help them buy better shrimp, but it's currently a major challenge.

The first challenge is that labeling and certification programs do not yet exist to identify which farmed shrimp meet sustainable production standards. The second challenge is that even when such programs are in place, the U.S. demand will likely greatly exceed their supply.

Shester's advice to consumers right now is "only buy shrimp that you know comes from a sustainable source. If you can't tell for sure, try something else from the Seafood Watch yellow or green lists." Knowing that many will be unwilling to give up America's favorite seafood, he advocates simply eating less of it and keeping an eye on future updates to the Seafood Watch guide to eating sustainable seafood.

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More shrimp than tuna (4.00 / 2)
Americans are eating 4.1 pounds of shrimp apiece each year -- significantly more than the 2.8 pounds per year we each ate of the second most popular seafood, canned tuna.

Jill, do those numbers surprise you? I'm surprised that we eat that little tuna, but I'm more surprised that we eat almost 50% more shrimp than tuna.

Can you say more about this? Is it reasonable that I would be surprised? How is it possible for a person to be oblivious to the fact that we eat 46% more shrimp than tuna?

This shakes me. It flabbergasts me. I don't know. Your story is much about waste. I wonder if that 46% difference reflects some drastic difference in a wastage number somewhere.

And I really am surprised we average less than 3 pounds of tuna per year. A good thing for tuna, I suppose, considering how much other meat we eat.


could it be partially (4.00 / 2)
because tuna comes in little cans whereas shrimp comes in the form of all-you-can-eat at Red Lobster?

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
But gosh... (4.00 / 2)
so many little cans!

[ Parent ]
Industry structure (4.00 / 2)
Do you know anything about the structure of the industry that imports shrimp into the U.S. and distributes it? Is the industry dominated by three or four giants? Are there lots of small players?

I have no idea there (4.00 / 2)
I know that the owner of Red Lobster is a major player.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
Red Lobster... (4.00 / 2)
This is new to me, I thought they were just a shitty restaurant.

Now I have to go look up the owner, see what else he's up to.  Intrigue!

Coming soon to a Philadelphia near you!


[ Parent ]
here you go (4.00 / 2)
http://www.darden.com/

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
Eeek. (4.00 / 2)
On the good side, I can honestly say I have never eaten at any of those restaurants. Not one, ever.

[ Parent ]
There are ethical shrimp producers that (4.00 / 1)
follow organic standards, unfortunately there are no intentional seafood regulations so these products cannot be sold as organic in the US.

The shrimp are farmed in organic rice paddies.  


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