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Op-Ed: The numbers tell the story when it comes to forced labor in seafood

November 18, 2023 — Katrina Nakamura is an interdisciplinary scientist and the owner of the Sustainability Incubator, which has screened conditions in over 500 seafood supply chains and trained over 80 suppliers in human rights due diligence using a service called Labor Safe Screen. Previously, Nakamura co-owned and operated six seafood restaurants located at fishing wharves.

If you’ve worked in seafood, then you know firsthand that handling fish or shellfish is physically-intensive work on a slippery surface with a knife or gear in your hands. You may share experiences with today’s frontline seafood workers like the intensity of working a frontline or the pride of being paid for what you produced.

But that could be where a common experience ends, because today’s typical wages are around USD 200 (EUR 183) per month. From a decade of screening seafood supply chains for labor conditions, I can attest that trouble sets in where a business has reduced its labor cost to 5 or less percent of the cost of business, perhaps to offset rising costs like fuel. Forced and indentured labor occur where producers or distributors are advantage-taking, heavily, to meet orders for an agreed low price – like where shrimp is routed through a middleman paying wages of USD 0.02 (EUR 0.01) per pound, for example, for peeling shrimp or picking crabs in an unregistered operation, and also taking wage deductions for boots and gear and a biased scale.

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

Study develops new method for identifying risk of forced labor in seafood supply chains

July 26, 2018 –A recent study, published 25 July, has developed a method to identify areas with high risks of forced labor throughout the seafood supply chain.

Published in Science Advances, the study – over the course of five years – developed a framework with five separate components that can allow companies to “efficiently and effectively assess” the risk of forced labor in supply chains. The framework utilizes existing data on supply chains as well as some of the same traceability technologies used in food safety to track worker conditions.

“The seafood sector has among the world’s most complex supply chains and utilizes sophisticated technology to track food safety conditions,” said Dr. Katrina Nakamura, lead author of the study and co-founder of the Sustainability Incubator. “We wondered if the technology could also be used to collect data on working conditions. Our report shows the idea bears out. Companies in our study could see, for the first time, where conditions met minimum principles, were unknown, or were inadequate.”

Using data collected from UN institutions, NGOs, and seafood companies with interviews of workers on fishing vessels and in processing plants in Asia, the study developed a metric to identify working conditions in supply chains. Then, 18 seafood companies used the data to screen 118 products within the framework developed, which has been dubbed the “Labor Safe Screen” (LSS).

“Our findings also demonstrate that human rights due diligence may be added to fishing fleets and certification programs for seafood sustainability,” Dr. Nakamura said.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

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