Traceability and Sustainability in the Supply Chain

A implementation guide for applying traceability standards in the U.S. seafood supply chainhas been developed byNFI and GS1 US.

The Guide was developed in collaboration between NFI, GS1 US, and U.S. seafood industry stakeholders to provide consistent, practical seafood-traceability voluntary guidance for industry-wide use. It defines minimum requirements and best-practice recommendations for tracking seafood as they move through the supply chain from farms to processors, suppliers, distributors, retailers, and foodservice operators.

Organizations that contributed to the Traceability For Seafood U.S. Implementation Guide include: American Seafood, Bumble Bee Foods, Darden Restaurants, Glacier Fish, Gortons, GS1 US, Handy International, Icelandic Seafoods, Inland Seafoods, North Carolina State University, Pacific Seafoods, Red Chamber,Trace Register and NFI.

The guidelines are based on global standards, and apply to all types of seafood products for human consumption. The guide also applies to all levels of product hierarchy, which may include shipping logistics unit information, lots, pallets, cases, consumer items with data elements, etc.; and is relevant to all U.S. distribution channel participants, including farms, vessels, processors, suppliers, exporters, distributors, retailers, and foodservice operators.

The guide is free and available for download.(U.S. Seafood Traceability Implementation Guide)

Download the Seafood Traceability Proof of Concept Project Overview to find key insights about Identify, Capture, Share capabilities that could be optimized by implementing processes that leverage existing investments in GS1 Standards.

Download the December 6, 2012 Seafood Webinar on Product Traceability in the Seafood Supply Chain: Information Session with speakers Barbara Blakistone, NFI, Steve Mavity, Bumble Bee, and Mike Potochar, GS 1 US.