Observing someone defend something they once attempted to destroy is particularly ironic. The irony in Washington seafood trade circles takes the form of the Seafood Import Monitoring Program, a federal traceability regulation that the industry fought, ridiculed, and eventually sued for years. Some of those same players are now subtly—almost reluctantly—referring to it as one of the positive developments for their company.
That wasn’t how it began. The National Fisheries Institute and eight seafood companies filed a lawsuit to halt the Obama administration’s final-day push for the Seafood Traceability Rule, which required importers of species like tuna, swordfish, grouper, and red snapper to document their fish from boat to U.S. border. The burden of paperwork, they claimed. the disadvantage of competition. the excessive bureaucracy. U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta, a federal judge, disagreed. The regulation endured. It became operative on January 1st, 2018.

It’s important to focus on what transpired next. Something changed gradually, from the back offices of major seafood distributors along the Gulf Coast to markets like Pike Place in Seattle. Businesses that had feared the costs of compliance started to notice something else: the rule was eliminating the bad actors they had long harbored resentment toward. Honest suppliers had no way to prove that a competitor was undercutting prices by selling tilapia that was mislabeled as red snapper. It’s possible that this was happening more often than anyone acknowledged. They had that proof thanks to traceability.
It turns out that seafood fraud wasn’t limited to consumers. The market was being corroded from the inside out. Roughly one in five of the more than 25,000 seafood samples tested globally had incorrect labels, according to Oceana’s research. Industry insiders had always found that figure in a published report to be abstract. It became tangible when it was observed at the retail level, where premium species routinely performed worse than suspiciously inexpensive substitutes.
Speaking with those who work in the seafood distribution industry gives the impression that many businesses were aware of the fraud issue from the beginning but decided it would be less expensive to oppose regulation than to comply with it. Over time, that computation turned out to be incorrect. Regardless of its annoyances, the rule required documentation throughout the supply chain, and documentation has a way of improving the appearance of legitimate operations in contrast.
The original reasoning was expanded beyond what critics had anticipated when the FDA expanded traceability requirements in 2022 to include the majority of seafood throughout the entire supply chain, from boat to final point of sale. Compared to the original rule, even that encountered less organized opposition. It’s difficult to ignore what that silence implies.
Whether this change is a true ideological shift or just a practical adaptation is still up for debate. Most likely the latter, and that’s perfectly acceptable. Transparency did not win over the fishing industry. It found that, despite being unwanted, transparency was safeguarding its own market share. That’s a different thing, perhaps more durable but smaller and less inspiring.
In the end, the rule showed that the interests of consumers, environmentalists, and ethical companies were never truly at odds—something that effective regulation sometimes manages. All they required was a mechanism for alignment. In a sense, the fish remained unchanged. The documents did.
