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Overwaitea Food Group makes closed containment salmon available

SeaChoice retail partner, the Overwaitea Food Group, became the first Canadian retailer to offer a sustainable source of farmed salmon. Building on their commitment to seafood sustainability, Overwaitea positioned themselves as the exclusive North American retailer for sustainably farmed coho salmon sold under the brand SweetSpring.

The coho comes from a land-based closed containment salmon farm in Washington State that made news when it received a “Best Choice” sustainability ranking from the Monterey Bay Aquarium and SeaChoice.

Finding sustainable sushi just got easier!

Living Oceans Society is proud to help Canada’s largest sushi provider, Bento Nouveau provide ocean-friendly sushi options to Canadians from coast to coast.

Across Canada, you can find SeaChoice stickers on Bento products that identify Green and Yellow items from the SeaChoice sushi guide. Bento sells sushi in over 1,000 locations, including Canadian grocery stores, cafeterias, malls and food courts.

Wrecked boat spotted as more marine debris hits northern Vancouver Island

Monday, January 28, 2013

SOINTULA, B.C.— Another small Japanese vessel has been located intact among masses of debris accumulating on Vancouver Island’s western shores. Living Oceans Society’s Will Soltau made the discovery while on helicopter surveillance over the west coast of northern Vancouver Island on January 16. The small boat was approximately six meters in length, similar to a skiff found on Spring Island outside the village of Kyuquot, B.C. in August 2012.

Closed containment aquaculture

Closed containment aquaculture offers a viable, sustainable alternative to the environmental impacts of net pen salmon farming.
The top Canadian food retailers have joined with SeaChoice to embrace this new technology by asking the government to financially support closed containment innovations.

Retail industry giants, including Overwaitea Food Group, Safeway and Loblaws have written to to Canadian government officials expressing their support for closed containment and the need for federal support of this opportunity for sustainable aquaculture development.

From sushi craze to sustainability wave

One of the fastest growing sectors of the seafood market is sushi. Ranging from high end sushi bars serving up endangered bluefin to little mom and pop operations where you may not always be sure what’s in the California roll, the sushi world has some major sustainability challenges. We are seeing a shift in sushi sustainability in Canada too. Companies like Bento, Tomiyama and Tokyo Express are getting on board with SeaChoice to provide sustainable options to their customers.

New management measures protect deep-sea habitat, put B.C. bottom trawlers on the road to sustainability

For decades, environmentalists in British Columbia have clashed with the province’s groundfish bottom trawlers over the damage that the industry has caused ocean habitats. But in March 2012, both sides came together to forge ahead on this issue, and fragile ocean habitats are the big winner. 

Living Oceans Society and the David Suzuki Foundation developed innovative management measures in a collaborative effort with the B.C. bottom trawl fleet. These measures conserve corals and sponges, and reduce the fishery’s impact on deep-sea habitats.

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