John West stops destructive fishing six weeks after Greenpeace's 'Reject John West' campaign
This is another major victory for our oceans following the banning of the super trawler earlier this year.
Click here to see the new John West fishing policy.
Click here to see a slideshow of the 'Reject John West' campaign.
Find out how other canned tuna brands stack up on sustainability.
"In six weeks 20,000 Australians demanded John West respect fisheries science and change their tuna. This is a win for consumers and a win for the oceans. It shows that when Australians take action together, we can bring about real change."
Greenpeace launched a nation-wide campaign in late October targeting John West's use of destructive Fish Aggregating Devices (FADs) with purse seine nets. This fishing method needlessly kills hundreds of thousands of tonnes of juvenile tunas, sharks, rays, and critically endangered sea turtles every year.
In a statement released earlier today, John West committed to a complete ban on the use of FADs to fish for its tuna by 2015. John West has also committed not to source tuna from the Pacific Commons that Pacific Island Nations want protected from fishing.
John West joins major Australian brands Greenseas, Safcol and Sirena in their commitment to responsible fishing methods. Greenpeace's global tuna campaign has seen all brands and retailers in the UK, and Safeway in the US rule out the use of FADs. Coles and Woolworths are now the only two major companies on the Australian market not to have committed to sustainable fishing.
The announcement comes just as the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission meets in the Philippines to discuss extensive FAD bans and other measures to protect the world's largest tuna fishery.


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