The Effectiveness of Eco-labelling and Certification in Sustainable Aquaculture and Fisheries (EECSAF)

DOI

Data sets produced in this study included in-depth interviews with the senior management of CEOs (electronic and transcribed); case study analyses; UK consumer survey data; and interviews with the fishing industry (transcribed). In addition a number of teaching materials and reports were finalized over the impacts reporting period (Dec 31 2010). In phase 1 of the research semi-structured interviews, archival, web and document search were used to gather information on the implementation of aquaculture sustainability standards, the organisations behind the standards and the application of product ecolabels in the context of environmental policy. Such data was gathered from organisations. 15 interviews were transcribed. In phase 2 survey data were gather from a face to face consumer survey and UK scope, displaying data on individual consumers' and producers' views and practices concerning certification and ecolabelling. Phase 3 used unstructured in-depth interviews to gather data from some senior management of CEOs. 10 interviews were transcribed. In recent years three trends have become apparent with marine resources: an increase in demand for seafood, an emerging crisis in the state of global harvests, and a rapid increase in aquaculture. Statistics highlight the capacity of the oceans to produce wild harvests are nearing a sustainable limit. Within this context, certification and ecolabelling of seafood has become a popular means to inform consumers of the quality of a product. Consumers are increasingly requesting assurance that marine resources are being managed in a sustainable manner, above and beyond assurances from government. Over the last 10 years these approaches have grown in scope and have become increasingly visible with several key fisheries becoming certified as 'sustainable'. This research aims to unravel some of the key questions surrounding the ecolabelling process. The first phase of the research examines organisations that certify fisheries or aquaculture and investigates their processes of certification. The second phase explores the market effectiveness of selected eco-labels. Do they influence consumers? The final phase examines whether improvements to management have occurred within certified operations as a result of the process. This project is innovative as it looks at fisheries and aquaculture certification systems together and investigates the fundamental questions surrounding the effectiveness of ecolabelling as market based environmental policy tools.

It was a cross-sectional one-time study using semi structured interviews, archival, web, and document search. Survey data: face to face consumer survey, UK scope. Unstructured interviews with industry. Secondary resources were used to develop case studies, e.g. certification reports, annual reports and meeting minutes. Such data were taken from publicly accessible sources. For the face-to-face interviews and consumer surveys convenience sampling, purposive selection/case studies and qusi-random (random walk) sampling were used.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-851666
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=b7bd64fae46a8dd333e94849df1ac85183b005fa428dcaeb2c8d6bd7d08ae890
Provenance
Creator Potts, T, Scottish Association for Marine Science / UHI Millennium Institute
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2015
Funding Reference ESRC
Rights Tavis Potts, Scottish Association for Marine Science / UHI Millennium Institute; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Numeric; Text
Discipline Economics; Social and Behavioural Sciences
Spatial Coverage Scottland, England, Northern Ireland; United Kingdom