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Inside the Quiet Regulatory War Over Who Gets to Define ‘Sustainable Seafood’ in the United States

June 15, 2026

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Home » Inside the Quiet Regulatory War Over Who Gets to Define ‘Sustainable Seafood’ in the United States
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Inside the Quiet Regulatory War Over Who Gets to Define ‘Sustainable Seafood’ in the United States

Mildred BellBy Mildred BellJune 15, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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Sustainable Seafood
Sustainable Seafood
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Most American supermarkets have a little blue label with a fish outline and a checkmark at the seafood counter. This badge certifies that the product originated from a fishery that satisfies the Marine Stewardship Council’s sustainability standards. When they see it, the majority of shoppers take it as comfort.

They are likely unaware that the label represents the standards of a private organization that are completely different from the U.S. federal government’s definition of sustainable seafood, that neither of those frameworks is the same as what the Federal Trade Commission enforces, and that none of it addresses the distinct and documented issue that the fish in the package might not be the species listed on the label at all. There isn’t a single legally binding definition for the phrase “sustainable” in the US, and since an executive order in 2025 made domestic seafood competitiveness a federal goal, the debate over who gets to define it has intensified.

Restoring American Seafood Competitiveness, an executive order signed on April 17, 2025, called for lowering regulatory obstacles to domestic aquaculture and wild-capture fishing. It also assigned NOAA the responsibility of gathering public input on “fishery-related regulatory barriers” through October 2025. The order specifically expanded upon a 2020 predecessor that employed like language. In a May 2025 peer-reviewed publication, ScienceDirect researchers examined the two papers and found one distinct and significant difference: “sustainability” was referenced five times in the 2020 edict.

It was not mentioned once in the 2025 order. The report described the new approach as “regulatory dismantling rather than reform” and cautioned that the evidence basis that would support any future sustainability judgment could be compromised by defunding federal scientific databases and interagency coordination mechanisms. However, according to NOAA’s own website, “you can feel confident you’re making a sustainable seafood choice” if the seafood you buy is harvested or farmed in the United States. It is difficult to reconcile these two viewpoints.

Independent of all of this, the Marine Stewardship Council evaluates fisheries worldwide, including those in the United States, using its own set of scientific standards. The fishing industry uses MSC’s 2025 report that almost 90% of U.S. fisheries satisfy its sustainable requirements as proof that domestic fisheries are well-managed and that more regulation is not required. Conservation organizations interpret the same data differently, pointing out that NOAA’s more general domestic sustainability claim allows the 10% of products that don’t satisfy MSC standards to still be sold in U.S. marketplaces.

The import side has its own layer. On January 1, 2026, NOAA started prohibiting fish and fish products from foreign fisheries without a “comparability finding” under the Marine Mammal Protection Act. This enforcement action is external in nature and applies more stringent standards to imported seafood than the U.S. government does to its own domestic claims. There is a significant discrepancy between how the United States defines sustainable production and how it controls imports.

The situation is further complicated by NOAA’s funding reduction in 2025 and 2026. Any reliable assessment of sustainability ultimately relies on population monitoring, catch statistics, and stock assessments from federal scientific bodies.

Regardless of the administration’s preferred definition of the term, it is reasonable to question the quality of the science underlying U.S. sustainability claims if those agencies are shrinking, and staffing and budget reductions at NOAA have been a consistent story over the past two years. The FTC has the authority to regulate misleading advertising. It is unable to determine whether a fishery is truly sustainable. Scientists with boats, equipment, money, and time are needed for that.

Observing this accumulation of conflicting incentives and overlapping frameworks gives the impression that the “sustainable seafood” category is less of a clear signal to consumers and more of a battlefield where conflicting interests—federal agencies, private certifiers, industry associations, and conservation organizations—all have legitimate but distinct stakes in the outcome.

Sustainable Seafood
Sustainable Seafood

When a customer at the seafood counter reads the blue label, the country-of-origin sticker, and the “wild-caught” classification, they are making decisions based on inadequate information in a system that has not yet figured out what it is attempting to tell them. If a resolution is reached, it will result from ongoing scientific discussions, regulatory actions, and legal challenges.

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Mildred Bell

    Mildred Bell is a full-time digital professional, seasoned traveler, and ardent outdoor enthusiast who infuses her writing with a sincere love of the natural world. In her role as Senior Editor at fishonline.co.uk, the online home of Seafood Audit International, Mildred is in charge of editorial content covering news about the seafood industry, updates on food safety, politics, finance, and commentary from prominent figures in the fishing and seafood industries. Beyond the desk, Mildred has a deeper connection to the material she edits. She is a passionate angler who has spent years fishing open waters, rivers, and coastlines throughout the UK and beyond. Her genuine knowledge of the fishing industry informs all of her editorial choices. Mildred's passion for travel stems from the same restless curiosity. She has traveled to many different continents with a rod, a notebook, and an eye for the stories that others overlook.

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    Fishonline.co.uk is the official online home of Seafood Audit International, a UK-based food safety and quality management consultancy with more than 25 years of hands-on experience in the global seafood and fishing industries. Based in Wellington, Somerset, we work with fish processors, food businesses, government inspection services, and international organisations to deliver practical, measurable, and cost-effective food safety solutions.We are not a generic food safety company. Seafood and fish products are our entire focus — and that specialisation is what makes us different.Who We AreSeafood Audit International was founded on a straightforward belief: that food safety training and quality management should be practical, accessible, and genuinely useful — not a box-ticking exercise.For over two decades we have worked with clients ranging from high street fish retailers and small-scale processors to large-scale international fishing operations, government bodies, and seafood exporters in the developing world. Our experience stretches from dhows on Lake Victoria to the trawlers of the UK coastline — giving us a depth of real-world knowledge that classroom-only consultancies simply cannot match.Our lead consultant is a fully qualified auditor with extensive experience across British Retail Consortium (BRC) and ISO 9000 quality management standards, HACCP implementation, food hygiene, and the development of national food safety legislation for governments internationally.What We DoSeafood Audit International provides a comprehensive range of training, auditing, and consultancy services tailored specifically to the seafood and fishing industries:Training Courses

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