When Eating Shrimp, There’s No Free Lunch

International Business Times

Published Jun 10, 2014 05:05PM ET

When Eating Shrimp, There’s No Free Lunch

By Connor Adams Sheets - Shrimp is Americans' seafood of choice, but the facts of the modern shrimping industry validate the old maxim that there's no such thing as a free lunch. Producing the world's shrimp supply destroys the environment, kills other sea creatures, and even supports human slavery.

Shrimp, which like lobster was once seen as a sort of “cockroach of the seas” unfit for people’s plates, is now big business, one that the U.S. shrimp fishing industry is not able to keep pace with: more than 90 percent of all shrimp eaten in the country today is farmed overseas, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Foundation. In fact, the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) reports that the world faces a so-called aquaculture gap -- "the 80 million metric ton difference between our global wild harvest and the world's demand for healthy seafood,” according to John Connelly, president of the National Fisheries Institute.

In the race to fill that gap, many shrimp companies take steps that do great damage to the environment, from trawling the ocean floor to farming shrimp in fetid conditions. One particularly alarming statistic comes from the FAO, which estimates that 85 percent of the marine animals caught by shrimp trawlers around the world is classified “bycatch” -- aka: a species other than edible shrimp -- that is simply dumped back into the ocean, often after being maimed or killed by nets and machinery.

On Tuesday the story of shrimp grew even grimmer, as the Guardian released a report alleging that the world’s largest shrimp farmer, Thailand’s Charoen Pokphand Foods (BK:CPF), relies on slave labor for the production of some of the fishmeal that it feeds to its farmed shrimp.

The food giant, which provides prawns to many companies including the four largest international retailers -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc (NYSE:WMT); Tesco (LONDON:TSCO); Costco Wholesale Corporation (NASDAQ:COST); and Carrefour (PARIS:CARR). -- feeds its farmed shrimp fishmeal from suppliers that subject enslaved ship workers to beatings, torture and death, according to the Guardian’s investigation.

The article alleges that forces laborers are subjected to 20-hour workdays and brutal execution-style killings at sea, and slavery is endemic in Thailand’s fishing industry.

"Slaves forced to work for no pay for years at a time under threat of extreme violence are being used in Asia in the production of seafood sold by major U.S., British and other European retailers," the Guardian said.