The US Department of State is all about diplomacy, but did you know that it also has a small but influential role in regulating shrimp imports? It’s true! The department bans imports from foreign shrimp fisheries that do not meet the US standard for protecting sea turtles. Thematically, the law is similar to the Marine Mammal Protection Act’s import prohibition, which allows NOAA to ban imports from fisheries that harm marine mammals than the US does in its domestic fisheries.
To make these determinations, officials from State Department travel the world evaluating the need for and use of sea turtle escape hatches on (called Turtle Excluder Devices) attached to fishing nets. The department publishes a yearly update of the countries that are allowed to export their wild-caught shrimp to the US for one of these reasons:
Last week the department released its 2023 update, which we compared to its 2022 list and found the following changes:
Wild-caught shrimp is now allowed from: Mexico, Hong Kong, and Estonia.
Wild-caught shrimp is no longer allowed from: Malaysia.
Part of our job is to help our customers check to see if they have all of the information and records required by NOAA and the State Department to import seafood to the US from their suppliers. Across six complex regulatory programs these requirements are always changing. We track every update and revise our software to seamlessly incorporate every change. If monitoring the daily US federal register and carefully reading government regulations isn’t your idea of a good time, let Goldfish remove the guesswork of seafood trade so you can focus on growing your business.