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Today’s newsletter takes you inside the push to expand seafood menus to include new fish showing up in warmer waters. You can read and share a full version of this story on Bloomberg.com. For unlimited access to climate and energy news, please subscribe

Fish, it’s what’s for dinner

By Coco Liu

For years, Kate Masury, a Rhode Island-based environmentalist and seafood lover, heard from the fishing industry that the species they’ve been catching were changing

Staples such as Atlantic cod were dwindling and American lobsters — another local top-seller — were moving farther north. Other species not common to the area, like Spanish mackerel and blue crab, were appearing and becoming more abundant as ocean temperatures rose.

Fishermen were saying “I wish we could catch more of it,” she said. But they weren’t sure they’d be able to sell seafood that locals never heard of or knew. 

As the executive director of Eating With the Ecosystem, a New England nonprofit that helps the seafood industry adapt to climate change, Masury has been trying to convince the whole supply chain, from fishermen to restaurant goers, to incorporate these species that thrive in warmer water, which she calls “climate winners.”  

Bloomberg Green spoke with Masury about her experience of introducing “climate winners” to consumers, the surprises she’s discovered along the way, and the barriers to inserting those less-familiar species in our seafood supplies. The conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity. 

A dish made with blue crab. Source: Eating With the Ecosystem

It is in fishermen’s interest to sell what they can catch, but consumers can buy seafood caught elsewhere. Why would they want to eat more “climate winners” from local waters?

There's a lot of interest from consumers to eat sustainably and behave sustainably. We get asked all the time: “What should I be eating?” But within the seafood world, there's over 100 different species that we land here in the New England region. So it can be really complicated for people to understand what to eat from a sustainability perspective, and there's a lot of dynamics at play. Eating “climate winners” is something that people can do and will enjoy doing.

If consumer interest is already in place, why can’t people just buy and eat more of those species?

Some of it is consumer awareness and consumer perceptions. Within the United States, the top four seafood species are shrimp, salmon, tuna and tilapia. I think a lot of people are intimidated to try something new as they don't know what it is going to taste like. If you Google salmon recipes, you can find a million. But if you Google something like a longfin squid recipe, it's a lot harder to find.

It also depends on where the fish historically was and if there is food culture around it. Black sea bass, for example, is a species that used to be centered around North Carolina and Virginia, and it's more popular within that region. But in Maine, it's still fairly unfamiliar.

So how do you create a new food culture?

Sometimes people are intimidated to cook something for the first time. But seeing how a chef, who is professional and can make delicious food, prepares it makes people more willing to try. Restaurants can be a good first step, and then it trickles down to the markets and people cooking things at home.

In 2021, we had 10 restaurants in Rhode Island participating in a pilot. We supplied them with 12 species of “climate winners,” including Spanish mackerel, grey triggerfish, blue crabs and red drum. Every week, the restaurants served a different species and we collected feedback from chefs and customers for when these species could play a larger role in our local fisheries. [For now, “climate winners” such as Spanish mackerel and grey triggerfish are found in Rhode Island waters mostly during the summer.]

We learned from the restaurants through this pilot that we should compare a less familiar “climate winner” species with a species that most consumers know about. For example, if we want to sell red drum, we can compare it to striped bass, which is a more popular species in the New England region. Then consumers understand what they’re going to get.

What’s missing to scale up this practice?

We need consumer education and more awareness. For example, we can tell consumers what it tastes like, what its texture is like, and what are the ways that you can cook it. If we can provide that information, it helps people envision how to utilize it in their cooking.

And fishermen ultimately will need regulations that allow them to catch those “climate winners” when they are available in commercial abundance. It can take a while for fisheries management to adapt to the changing ecosystems. And once there is a commercial fishery and more demand for those “climate winners,” it's really important to have the science to help understand those species and the dynamics there, so we can catch them at a sustainable level.

What role can consumers play?

If you shop at a local fish market, ask your local fish market: “Hey, I heard that this species is expanding in my region. I really want to try it. Do you have it?” The seafood market often can get a special order for you, if they don't have it available. And because they now know you're interested in it, they might get it and make it available to other consumers as well.

A lot of times seafood businesses could get those species. They just don't carry them on a regular basis because they don't want them to go to waste if there is no interest in that. It's a chicken-and-egg situation. Just asking shows that there's demand for those species. 

Read the full Q&A. Subscribe for even more greener living and lifestyle news. 

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It is an unenviable challenge for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who has just been voted back into the office with an impressive new majority and also wants Australia to host the COP31 climate summit in 2026.

But the Labor Party’s climate credentials will be put to test very soon, says David Stringer, Bloomberg Green’s Asia managing editor, on this week’s episode of Zero. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple,  Spotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

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