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Global Reporting Initiative unveils aquaculture standard

GRI 13: Agriculture, Aquaculture and Fishing Sectors 2022 is the first global and holistic sustainability reporting standard for all companies in the upstream production of crops, animals and seafood.

Global Reporting Initiative unveils aquaculture standard
June 28, 2022

The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) launched a new standard for agriculture, aquaculture and fishing sector standard, three sectors that produce the food and materials that are fundamental to humanity’s survival and will be supported to take accountability for their impacts. 

“While the essential role of the agriculture, aquaculture and fishing sectors in feeding the world is clear to see, clarity on their impacts is not. The use of land and seas face ever-competing demands, while biodiversity loss and the urgency of climate adaptation demonstrate why greater transparency is essential. In addition, with 2.5 billion people relying on the sectors for their livelihoods, their impacts on economic development and human rights should not be underestimated,” GRI said. 

GRI 13: Agriculture, Aquaculture and Fishing Sectors 2022 is the first global and holistic sustainability reporting standard for all companies in the upstream production of crops, animals and seafood, setting expectations for disclosure of their shared and distinct impacts.

Adding to a growing suite of Sector Standards, GRI 13 addresses:

  • The topics likely to be material for any agriculture, aquaculture or fishing organization, based on the impacts of these sectors.
  • New disclosures on food security, land and resource rights, living wage and income, natural ecosystem conversion, animal welfare, soil health, and pesticides use.
  • The multiplying effect of the sectors when it comes to the SDGs – supporting companies to make the connections between their impacts and all 17 Global Goals.
  • Policy implications for responsible business, based on international frameworks – as set by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), International Labour Organization (ILO), International Maritime Organization (IMO) and others.

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Judy Kuszewski, chair of the Global Sustainability Standards Board (GSSB), the independent entity that sets the GRI Standards, said that “there is a paradox in that the ways we produce the food and materials that a growing population requires also result in numerous economic, environmental and social impacts – which in turn put at risk the future viability of world food systems. Addressing this challenge requires concerted, global and multi-stakeholder action. It’s clear that ‘business as usual’ by companies will not result in the sustainability transformation we need to see.”

“Shining the spotlight on the most significant impacts of organizations involved in crop cultivation, animal production, fishing or aquaculture, GRI 13 brings the clarity and consistency needed to inform responsible decision making. From safeguarding migrant workers to tackling overfishing, cutting emissions to halting deforestation, GRI’s Agriculture, Aquaculture and Fishing Standard has an enabling role in charting the pathway to a sustainable future for these sectors,” said Kuszewski.

GRI 13 was developed by a 19-member multi-stakeholder working group, with agriculture, aquaculture and fishing organizations represented alongside investors, civil society, mediating institutions and labor bodies. It included the following members.

“The aquaculture and fishing sectors face unique sustainability challenges and we welcome the Sector Standard from GRI as a guide to reporters on what can be considered most material to these industries. A common approach to reporting will not only ensure these concerns are monitored and documented at a much larger scale, but will also enable comparability between reporters to ultimately move the industries forward on best practice,” said Jacqueline Dixon, technical advisor, Hong Kong Sustainable Seafood Coalition.

A virtual launch event for GRI 13 will take place on June 30 – with perspectives shared by GRI, FAO, WBA and the OECD Centre for Responsible Business. Attendance is free of charge, with advance booking required.