A little fishing boat is pulling anchovies from the Pacific somewhere off the coast of Peru. Those fish will have traveled through at least three jurisdictions, changed hands many times, and gone through more paperwork than most people sign in a year by the time they arrive at a European aquafeed facility and ultimately wind up as farmed salmon on a London restaurant plate. The question that is currently keeping compliance teams, investors, and supermarket buyers up at night is whether any of that paperwork truly reflects what actually happened—where the fish came from, who caught it, and under what circumstances.
The financial ramifications of opacity have become severe enough to spur private action without waiting for legislation, which has accelerated the seafood traceability movement. Since it doesn’t fit the typical narrative about voluntary corporate responsibility, it is important to state this clearly. These businesses are not acting morally out of compassion. Businesses are doing this because the consequences of not doing so—such as border seizures, ESG downgrades, retailer contract losses, and affiliation with forced labor—have grown significant. The incentive structure has changed more quickly than any regulatory procedure could.
The most obvious motivator is most likely the pressure from investors. For a number of years, the FAIRR Initiative—a group of institutional investors that oversee trillions of dollars in assets—has been methodically pressuring seafood companies to view supply chain traceability as a fundamental component of risk management.
The reasoning is straightforward: an opaque supply chain conceals the possibility of stock collapse brought on by overfishing, exposure to forced labor, and regulatory seizure at the border. Financial harm results from all three of those consequences. For businesses that are unable to prove chain-of-custody transparency, investors pricing in those risks have essentially created a market penalty, which frequently surpasses any fine imposed by the government.
The same dynamic has been strengthened by consumer pressure in the opposite direction. There is more to the change than merely ethical preference. Verified evidence is required as a legal basis for retailers and restaurant chains operating in markets with stringent allergen labeling regulations and origin-of-catch laws, particularly the EU. Businesses that are unable to supply it are not awarded the contract. It’s quite mechanical. Additionally, the pressure spreads to importers, processors, and ultimately the fishing vessel itself because the retailers at the top of the supply chain are also under scrutiny from investors and customers.
In response to the fragmentation of regulations, the private sector developed its own protocol. The Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability created an interoperable technical framework that enables cross-border communication between various systems as well as a standardized set of Key Data Elements, which are the particular details that must be recorded and communicated at every stage of the supply chain. Governments and non-governmental organizations now use that norm, which was created without a legislative mandate, as the de facto standard. It’s a noteworthy reversal: rather than the other way around, public institutions went toward the norm that industry wrote.

This was made feasible by technology. Blockchain, IoT sensors on fishing boats, mobile apps for reporting catches, and cloud-based data networks are some of the solutions that can collect and send traceability data in real time across several jurisdictions. They don’t hold off on negotiating international treaties. An Indonesian fishing captain can record a catch on a smartphone app, and a UK grocery buyer can get that information in a matter of hours. Legislative procedures that discuss comparable standards usually take several years to complete. The private sector has entered this arena because of the discrepancy between what technology permits and what rules demand.
