Ned Daly

Contributing Editor

Ned Daly is a sustainability strategist with Diversified Communications. He has worked on sustainable markets in a variety of resources for 25 years. Ned worked in seafood for the last decade with SeaWeb, Previously he was director of RugMark International (now GoodWeave), a certification program for child-labor-free rugs coming from Southeast Asia. He also served as chief operating officer for the Forest Stewardship Council in the United States, managing relationships with industry leaders and a diversity of key stakeholders including conservation nongovernment organizations, policymakers and industry trade associations. Ned has also worked on sustainable markets in the agricultural sector and the relationship between resource extraction and ecosystem health. He lives in Alfred, Maine.


Author Archive

Published on
November 24, 2023

The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has launched a new platform intended to identify areas that are likely to experience maritime conflict or food insecurity due to climate-driven fisheries migration.

The Oceans Futures program, launched at The Halifax International Security Forum on 18 November, is a response to a 20-fold increase in fisheries conflict over the last four decades and a projected 23 percent of global fish stocks migrating due to

Read More
Published on
November 17, 2023

Japan’s seafood industry is rapidly changing. For example, a 2020 fisheries law significantly changed guidance around effective practices in fisheries management. Japanese producers and harvesters, meanwhile, are increasingly adopting measures to provide assurances of responsible supply geared both toward the domestic market – where consumer interest in sustainable seafood is growing – and the export market, with the latter

Read More
Published on
November 3, 2023

Smart Catch, a program developed by the James Beard Foundation with support from Paul Allen’s Vulcan Foundation, has been acquired by Where Food Comes From, Inc.

The program, which was launched in 2016 and expanded in 2017, works with chefs and restaurants to promote sustainable seafood through training, education, and awards a Smart Catch seal for participating restaurants.

Where Food Comes From is an independent, third-party

Read More
Published on
October 30, 2023

Many fisheries, especially those that are artisanal or small-scale, experience barriers to attaining certifications and ensuring long-term prosperity, but fishery improvement projects (FIPs) can provide the push these fisheries need to hurdle the obstacles in their path – such as difficulty securing resources and capital, achieving proper capacity, and streamlining the safe processing and efficient transport of seafood resources.

The

Read More
Published on
October 23, 2023

Seafood Business for Ocean Stewardship (SeaBOS), a precompetitive collaboration between nine of the largest seafood companies in the world that aims to achieve sustainable transformation within the industry, released its first impact report providing a transparent review of collective action taken by its member companies.

SeaBOS members – Maruha Nichiro, Cargill, Nissui, Thai Union, Dongwon, Skretting, Cermaq, Kyokuyo, and Charoen Pokphand

Read More
Published on
October 20, 2023

Global fisheries often require assistance from third parties to ensure their operations meet the standards needed to attain certifications and other beneficial credentials.

Assistance sometimes comes in the form of direct investment, but fisheries more often achieve long-term success when that help involves long-lasting oversight and guidance, such as in the form of fishery improvement projects (FIPs), which have backed small fisheries in

Read More
Published on
October 19, 2023

Two new reports indicate that blue swimming crab stocks in Indonesia are declining in many areas and that social issues remain a concern for the health of fishing communities and the stability of supply chains, even though there are positive economic indicators toward better management and governance of the stock.

In 2022, Indonesia’s crab exports brought in over USD 450 million (EUR 420 million), according to Indonesia’s

Read More
Published on
October 12, 2023

The Marine Stewardship Council’s updated fisheries standard includes new requirements for preventing the loss of fishing equipment, such as nets and lines, and more stringent monitoring of the impact of lost gear, also known as “ghost gear.”

In a peer-reviewed paper led by the MSC, a team of scientists including Victor Restrepo, the vice president of the International Seafood Sustainability Foundation, has documented the

Read More
Published on
October 6, 2023

Future of Fish, an international nonprofit working closely with seafood supply chains, aims to identify and remove barriers toward achieving a more sustainable seafood industry. The organization has adapted a global approach and applied consistent principles to engage with individual fisheries.

In an interview with SeafoodSource, Future of Fish Executive Director Peter Battisti discussed how his company effectively engages with nonindustrial

Read More
Published on
September 27, 2023

As the seafood industry, conservation organizations, and community advocates work together to support healthy fisheries and stable communities, the laboratories for designing new approaches or adapting existing models are small fishing villages throughout the world, like El Rosario, Mexico.

El Rosario is a community of approximately 2,000 people in Baja California, Mexico, that is “dominated by fishing and agriculture,” said

Read More