Great. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thanks for the opportunity to provide input to this committee. My name is Kurtis Hayne and I am program director for the Marine Stewardship Council in Canada. I'm speaking to you from Victoria, British Columbia.
The MSC is a global non-profit organization that works to end overfishing around the world. We work with scientists, fisheries, industry experts and other non-profits. Our goal is to improve the way the ocean is fished through our MSC fisheries and our chain of custody standards. The MSC program incentivizes sustainable fishing practices globally. The MSC program is the most recognized sustainable seafood certification in Canada and the world.
Supply chain businesses handling MSC seafood must meet our MSC chain of custody standard. It's a traceability standard that ensures that fish and seafood sold with the blue label has come from fisheries certified as sustainable against the MSC fisheries standard.
Our chain of custody program is a rigorous and independent verification system that follows seafood with the MSC blue fish label from the fishery to the final consumer. It requires that all companies involved in the purchase, processing or sale are certified and submit to third party annual audits for traceability.
MSC seafood is accurately labelled, enabling consumers to make an informed choice and [Technical difficulty—Editor] fraud. DNA testing has shown that species mislabelling for MSC seafood is less than 1%, which is much lower than studies that the committee has heard about for other seafood products and other global estimates of mislabelling rates.
We regularly monitor MSC-labelled products for integrity and run investigations that trace products back through the supply chain. Unannounced audits of certificate holders are built into our program.
Participation in the program is voluntary. The fisheries and companies that are MSC certified do it of their own accord and are committed to and invested in meeting our standard. There are 327 chain of custody certificates across Canada covering over 1,850 different locations that are audited for traceability for MSC certified seafood. This represents over 400 different products labelled with the MSC ecolabel that were sold to Canadian consumers last year. Despite this, there are still gaps in coverage for certified seafood in Canada, particularly in the food service sector.
The MSC's research also shows that Canadians want to know that their seafood is traceable. [Technical difficulty—Editor] consumers want to know that the fish they buy can be traced to a known and trusted source. We believe that supply chain assurance and traceability systems should be a requirement for credible claims of sustainability. We support the ongoing advancement of traceability efforts, as they're essential to providing legal, sustainable and correctly labelled seafood for Canadian consumers and enabling Canadians to sell seafood into international markets.
Thank you for the opportunity to provide input. I welcome your questions.