J. Sainsbury, Britain's third biggest supermarket group, is responding to growing concerns over shrinking fish stocks by bringing in a colour-coded scheme to warn its customers about endangered species.
The scheme, which gives wild fish cuts a green, amber or red light depending on the risk of a species dying out, is the first of its kind in Britain and has been hailed by Greenpeace as a model for the rest of the high street.
Sainsbury's has pledged to stock only green or amber rated fish by the end of December, costing it £1.5 million ($4.3 million) in lost sales. To avoid confusion with a separate traffic-light scheme it uses to warn shoppers about the nutritional value of their purchases, the colour coding will appear on its website and on its fish counters rather than on the packaging.
Oliver Knowles, the oceans campaigner at Greenpeace, said Sainsbury's had caught up with rivals Marks & Spencer and Waitrose, which top the supermarket industry for their ethical sourcing strategies. "To see a big retailer make these changes is where it starts to get interesting," he said.
Sainsbury's claimed it had devised the sector's most rigorous checklist to help it determine whether it was buying fish from sustainable sources after it had to drop its goal of selling only fish certified by the Marine Stewardship Council by 2010 because it realised that not enough fisheries would carry the requisite certification in time.
"It is a robust decision-making process that is having real and practical changes on the shelves," Mr Knowles said.
Sainsbury's has a 21.4 per cent share of the fresh fish market.
This month, the National Consumer Council criticised supermarkets for not making it easier for shoppers to buy sustainable fish. The issue has become one of the hot topics in the battle to be Britain's "greenest" grocer.
- INDEPENDENT
Grocer goes greener with colour-coded fish
AdvertisementAdvertise with NZME.