To ensure food security and nutritional quality for a growing world population in the face of climate change, stagnant capture fisheries production, increasing aquaculture production and competition for natural resources, countries must be accountable for what they consume rather than what they produce. To investigate the sustainability of seafood consumption, we propose a methodology to examine the impact of seafood supply chains across national boundaries: the seafood consumption footprint. The seafood consumption footprint is expressed as the biomass of domestic and imported seafood production required to satisfy national seafood consumption, and is estimated using a multi-regional input output model. Thus, we reconstruct for the first time the global fish biomass flows in national supply chains to estimate consumption footprints at the global, country and sector levels (capture fisheries, aquaculture, distribution and processing, and reduction into fishmeal and fish oil) taking into account the biomass supply from beyond national borders.
1.European Commiss, JRC, Sustainable Resources Directorate, Water & Marine Resources Unit,Unit D 02, Via E Fermi 2749, I-21027 Ispra, Italy 2.European Commiss, JRC, Unit Demog Migrat & Governance E 06, Directorate Space Secur & Migration, Via E Fermi 2749, I-21027 Ispra, Italy
Recommended Citation:
Guillen, Jordi,Natale, Fabrizio,Carvalho, Natacha,et al. Global seafood consumption footprint[J]. AMBIO,2019-01-01,48(2):111-122