Credit: John Angel/Unsplash
02 October
America can become more self-sufficient with its seafood
Can the U.S. reduce its reliance on imported seafood by sourcing more fish locally and building better infrastructure?
Ben Seal reports for Civil Eats.
In short:
- The U.S. imports 90% of its seafood, even though its fisheries could meet the nation’s needs.
- Community-supported fisheries (CSFs) help fishermen sell directly to consumers, bypassing middlemen and lowering environmental impacts.
- Climate change and global market disruptions make seafood self-reliance more urgent.
Key quote:
“It’s not a law of gravity that 90 percent of the seafood we consume in the U.S. has to be imported.”
— Joshua Stoll, founder of Local Catch Network
Why this matters:
Global trade in seafood strains American fishermen and increases environmental harm through long-distance shipping. Strengthening local seafood systems can improve sustainability and reduce the risks from international market disruptions.
Related EHN coverage:
civileats.com