Denmark must develop even further as a producer of high-quality food
Jacob Jensen,…
Tag:
Sustainability
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EventsNews
Tanzania: Global Aquatic Food Value Chain Sustainability at the Blue Food Forum in September 2024
FISH4ACP has announced the Blue Food Forum in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, to be held 12-13 September 2024.… -
Sustainable practices build stock resilience This article was featured in Eurofish Magazine 5 2023.…
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The first Lidl shop opened in Germany in 1973 and had only three employees. Now the chain operates about 120,000 stores in 31 countries across Europe and in the US,…
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Finding ways to reduce the environmental impact of fish farming This article was featured in Eurofish Magazine 2 2023.…
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The Adriatic city of Pula in northwestern Croatia has won the world’s first Friend of the Sea Sustainable City Award.…
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The fight against IUU fishing remains the most important goal This article was featured in Eurofish Magazine 4 2022There have certainly been some successes in the fight for more sustainability in the fishing industry.…
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Sustainable fishing and innovation can improve impacts This article was featured in EUROFISH Magazine 6 / 2020. The National Agency for Fisheries and Aquaculture, ANPA, is the body responsible for the management of fisheries and aquaculture in Romania. It develops a national strategy for the sector and the regulations to implement it.
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Processing
Value potential of many seafood products is not sufficiently exploited – Sustainable utilisation saves resources
Producing food requires huge resources but an estimated one seventh of the resulting products are lost before they are consumed, and in the case of fish and seafood as much as one third! Whether spoiled, destroyed or carelessly thrown away – losses on the way from origin to plate are high. New strategies are now being developed to reduce or, better still, to avoid food waste and losses altogether. This article was featured in EUROFISH Magazine 5 /2020. During the catching and processing of fish and seafood considerable amounts of waste occur. Some of it, roughly estimated at around 17%, is “disposed of” at sea immediately after the catch. About twice as much is lost during processing on land. And then there are also losses that occur during transport, at individual stages of trade, in the catering trade, or in consumers’ homes. A definition of the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) is often used to distinguish between “food losses” and “food waste”.
