Daily recap, March 14: Will US import ban cover Russian fish processed in China?
Undercurrent News' EMEA editor, Neil Ramsden, rounds up the biggest seafood news stories from Monday
Russian seafood ban will hit US industry hard, SENA speakers say
The US Food and Drug Administration and US Customs are already tracing shipping worldwide in search of illegal activity as seafood producers reroute Russian traffic
Daily recap, March 11-13: UCN heads to Boston as US bans Russian imports
Undercurrent News' EMEA editor, Neil Ramsden, rounds up the biggest seafood news stories from this weekend gone
Expect shrimp prices to decline due to coming glut, Sedacca says
Much of the shrimp that will help drive down prices is literally out to sea, on cargo ships, ordered when demand was high and shipping uncertain
Biden to ban import of Russian seafood, seek to strip ‘most favored nation’ status
US president Joe Biden announced Friday that he will ban the import of Russian seafood while simultaneously pursuing removal of Russia's 'most favored nation' status
Seafood trading site appoints former Grobest, Nomad exec as CEO
The seafood trading site Seafoodportal.com announced the appointment of Kristin Veriga as its new CEO, tasked with accelerating the group's expansion
UK processors brace for 30% price hike in fallout from Ukraine conflict
'Margins are already tight across the processing sector and many businesses (likely SMEs) will not be able to absorb these costs' -- Seafish
Airfreight costs double for fresh seafood sent to East Asia, though China largely unaffected
The cost of flying salmon from farms in northern Norway to Japan and South Korea has roughly doubled after Russia closed its airspace to European and Japanese airlines
Daily recap, March 10: UK firms to shift away from Russian supply; Profand acquires Kefalonia
Undercurrent News' EMEA editor, Neil Ramsden, rounds up the biggest seafood news stories from Thursday
Russian fisheries in danger of losing MSC label over auditor group’s decision
'While respecting our contractual obligations with [conformity assessment bodies] and scheme owners, ASI will limit its activities in Russia where possible'
