Every April, a certain type of noise permeates the aisles of Seafood Expo Global: the smell of espresso from someone’s improvised barista cart, the low hum of translated conversation, and booths piled high with ice and salmon fillets. This year, the noise in Hall 4, Booth A401, had a new focal point: a brand-new label with the ASC logo applied to packaging from international partners. It wasn’t nuanced. It was intended to be observed.
This label was introduced by the Aquaculture Stewardship Council back in March, but it was put to the test in Barcelona by those who must actually sell it. The response was swift and uneven. Before the EU’s Green Transition Directive tightens sustainability claims in September, some retailers appeared genuinely relieved. According to ASC, this label was created through consumer testing across multiple markets. Some, who were more dubious, wanted to know if a fresh appearance truly altered anything beneath the surface.
This conflict was the focal point of ASC’s premier side event, “Proving Change from Source to Shelf.” Gontran de Ceballos of Lubimar, a Spanish estuary farm that became the world’s first operation certified under the new ASC Farm Standard in April, spoke with CEO Chris Ninnes. A former salt field transformed into a functional wetland that yields sea bass and sea bream is an eye-catching case study. After visiting himself, Ninnes described it as nearly perfect. It’s reasonable to wonder if every farm can duplicate that, and it’s likely an open question.

ISEAL Alliance’s Martyn Cole pushed the discussion in the direction of verification, contending that labels are only meaningful if the certification supporting them can withstand external examination. In this field, that’s not a line to be thrown away. For the past year, ASC has faced criticism from both sides: environmental organizations claim the Farm Standard is too forgiving, while supply chain participants claim it is too strict to be practical. Ninnes does not refute the criticism; instead, he presents it as the inevitable expense of creating a single global set of rules for a sector that differs greatly between Chile and Norway.
There were also victories to mention. After reaching the same milestone in the Faroe Islands, Bakkafrost Scotland announced full ASC certification for all of its Scottish locations. This is a truly remarkable level of consistency for a significant salmon producer. Additionally, Ninnes rose from ninety-first to twenty-fourth on Intrafish’s Power 100 list two years ago, indicating how much weight ASC’s voice now carries, whether justly or not.
Here, it’s difficult to ignore the timing. Consumers are arguably more skeptical of green claims than they have ever been, and labels are currently proliferating across food categories. By combining the new look with expansion in markets like the U.S., which Ninnes described as the organization’s fastest-growing at the moment, ASC appears to be betting that clarity, not just credibility, is what wins shelf space going forward.
It’s still genuinely unclear if the rebrand will actually change consumer purchasing habits. Trust developed over years, not at a single trade show, determines whether a label succeeds or fails. ASC is aware of this. By all accounts, the team is already preparing for their return to Barcelona the following year, which may indicate that this is seen as a long game rather than a single spectacular debut.
