Nearly Half of U.S. Seafood Supply Is Wasted

Researchers say waste adds to other problems threatening global seafood resources such as overfishing, pollution, and climate change

Written byJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
| 3 min read
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As much as 47 percent of the edible U.S. seafood supply is lost each year, mainly from consumer waste, new research from the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future (CLF) suggests.

The findings, published in the November issue of Global Environmental Change, come as food waste in general has been in the spotlight and concerns have been raised about the sustainability of the world’s seafood resources. In the U.S. and around the world, people are being advised to eat more seafood, but overfishing, climate change, pollution, habitat destruction and the use of fish for other purposes besides human consumption threaten the global seafood supply.

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