oceans

Tuna league table 2008: Tesco

Last edited 4 August 2008 at 5:40pm

Tesco's - no 6 in our tuna league table

Tuna league table 2008: ASDA

Last edited 7 January 2011 at 2:23pm

DA - 4th in the Tinned Tuna League Table

 

Tuna league table 2008: Co-op

Last edited 4 August 2008 at 4:24pm

Co-op - a creditable 2nd in the tinned tuna league

Tuna league table 2008: Sainsbury's

Last edited 7 January 2011 at 2:22pm -

Sainsbury's - top of the table

 

Tinned tuna's hidden catch

Last edited 30 July 2008 at 4:27pm

Who's at the bottom of our tuna league table?

Click on the image to find out!

Tuna - you've probably got a tin or two in your cupboard. Cheap, convenient and versatile. It is also very big business. The tinned tuna trade is worth around US$ 2.7 billion a year.

And in the UK, we love it: we are the second biggest customer for canned tuna in the world after the USA.

Try our sustainable fish recipes from top chefs

Last edited 28 July 2008 at 3:43pm -

Loch Fyne's oysters in oatmeal

Some of the nation's finest chefs and restaurateurs have agreed to share their favourite fish recipes with us to encourage us all to eat only sustainable seafood, and to show their support for the campaign. Thanks guys, much appreciated!

'Eco-chippy' sets new standards for sustainable fish and chips

Posted by jossc — 11 July 2008 at 3:30pm - Comments

Colman's fish restaurant owner and key Seafood See supporter Richard Ode

Colman's in South Shields has been described as "the nearest thing to an eco-chippy you're likely to find", a fish and chip restaurant which only serves wild fish from sustainable grounds, uses additive-free vegetable oil and sends its waste fat to be made into bio-fuel. Noted for its welcoming atmosphere, Colman's has featured regularly for the past few years in the Times' Top 10 UK Fish and Chip Shops, and was voted Best UK Takeaway at the BBC Food and Farming Awards 2007.

23 days in custody without charge for Greenpeace Japan activists

Last edited 1 July 2008 at 1:58pm
1 July, 2008

A court in Aomori, Japan has ruled that two Greenpeace peaceful protestors who exposed a major scandal around the embezzlement of whale meat from the Japanese government-sponsored Southern Ocean whaling programme will spend the maximum time in custody without charge permissible under Japanese law - 23 days.

Last edited 1 January 1970 at 1:00am
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