News — Growing up 30 minutes from the ocean meant the beach wasn’t just a vacation destination—it was a part of my daily life. My Florida upbringing sparked a deep fascination with the sea and a lasting drive to do what I could to protect it. Although remain mysterious, one truth is unmistakably clear: overfishing is taking a visible and devastating toll on this vital ecosystem.
Around of marine fisheries are either fully exploited or overfished, and pollutants drive biodiversity loss in our ocean as well as riverways and coastal zones. found that more than 55 percent of the ocean surface is covered by commercial fishing—more than four times the area covered by agriculture.
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This is not just a problem for the ocean, it’s a problem for the people who depend on it. Currently, the livelihoods of worldwide depend on the ocean. That number—which is inclusive of people whose main source of protein is seafood and those whose jobs are directly or indirectly linked to the ocean—is only going to keep rising. The human population reached eight billion in November 2022 and is . Consumption of aquatic foods (farmed and wild) is rising
We can reduce the burden of overfishing on our oceans to some extent through . However, improving management inherently requires setting limits on wild-caught fish production—how much can be caught, when and where, and what methods may be used. Even the best-managed fishery will have an upper limit on how much fish it can produce per year.
While reducing overfishing through better management is a critical endeavor to reduce strain on our ocean, there is also another solution that doesn’t get as much attention: alternative proteins. Plant-based and cultivated fish hold enormous potential for feeding a growing population the fish they love while easing pressure on the conventional fishing industry and, in turn, reducing harm to our oceans.
The climate benefits of alternative seafood
Conventional seafood production is caught in a precarious cycle: it's both contributing to climate change and increasingly threatened by it. Warming waters, ocean acidification, and changing ecosystems are already reducing the productivity of fisheries and aquaculture—and one study found that of seafood production is vulnerable to climate change. This is not a distant threat, but an urgent, near-term challenge.
By the end of this decade—recognized as the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable
Development—global seafood production is expected to grow by . But neither wild-capture fishing nor fish farming can expand at this pace without putting additional strain on ocean and freshwater ecosystems, compounding the pressures already facing a finite planet in a rapidly changing climate.
Rising ocean temperatures are already , with many species moving toward the poles and tropical waters becoming increasingly depleted. Some tropical regions are predicted to see in potential seafood catch by 2050. Climate change is also making seafood —for example, rates of Vibrio, a rare but often deadly bacterial infection, are rising globally.
While the research landscape for assessing the of both conventional and alternative seafood is still in its infancy (a ripe area of research for the scientific and policy communities), early studies suggest that diversifying our seafood supply with plant-based and cultivated options—especially when they are produced with renewable energy—could be a transformative strategy for developing a resilient, climate-smart seafood supply chain and blue economy. One clear reason is that alternative seafood production avoids two major emissions sources in the conventional seafood supply chain: and for aquaculture.
Our whitepaper offers further insights:
Plant-based seafood and cultivated seafood produced with renewable energy are predicted to have lower emissions footprints than most farmed and wild-capture seafood. Plant-based alternatives have a GHG footprint one-third less than conventionally farmed fish and three-quarters less than farmed crustaceans.
Renewable energy is critical to realizing the climate benefits of cultivated meat and seafood. Life-cycle assessments project that produced with renewable energy will be in the . Further, cultivated seafood is expected to require even less energy than cultivated red meat and poultry, in large part because seafood can be cultivated at lower temperatures than terrestrial meats.
The biodiversity benefits of alternative seafood
Ocean and coastal environments provide essential ecosystem services that life depends on—from the oxygen we breathe, to the food we eat, to the water we drink.
But these ecosystems are under increasing pressure. from the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services found that humans have significantly altered two-thirds of the ocean—up from 40 percent in 2008. Biodiversity loss in marine environments is being driven by habitat destruction, overfishing, and pollution, with from climate change and ocean acidification accelerating the damage. This loss , including food scarcity, economic instability, and increased risk of zoonotic disease transmission.
Aquaculture—now responsible for half of the global seafood supply—is not without harm. When poorly managed, it can damage sensitive habitats such as coastal wetlands, introduce pollutants like excess feed and antibiotics, spread disease, and displace native species. These pressures, if left unchecked, erode the ocean’s productivity, resilience, and the diversity of life it supports.
Just as a diverse and sustainable food system is critical for biodiversity, biodiversity is foundational to a productive and resilient food system. that protecting and restoring biodiversity will require a major transformation of the global food system to reduce waste and increase sustainability and efficiency.
While some fisheries and aquaculture operations have improved sustainability through stronger governance and innovation, these efforts haven’t kept pace with the growing pressure on marine ecosystems. Diversifying our seafood supply with alternative proteins will be essential to reduce biodiversity loss and build long-term resilience.
As highlighted in our whitepaper, alternative seafood presents a strategic opportunity to diversify our food supply in ways that protect biodiversity and reduce pressure on marine ecosystems.
Key advantages of alternative seafood include:
Protection and recovery of marine species: Shifting demand to alternatives can help reduce overfishing and bycatch, allowing wild stocks to recover.
Reduced habitat loss and pollution: Alternative proteins require less land and eliminate ocean floor disruption, helping preserve fragile marine and coastal habitats.
Lower antibiotic use: Unlike many aquaculture systems, alternative proteins sharply reduce or eliminate the need for antibiotics, helping maintain microbial diversity and slow the spread of resistant pathogens.
A case study: Tuna
Tuna is fish with wide-ranging culinary applications. In some ways, this pantry staple is suffering from its own market success.
Canned tuna is the second most popular seafood product in the U.S., exceeded only by shrimp.
Americans eat about one billion pounds of canned and pouched tuna a year. Globally, more than seven million metric tons of tuna and tuna-like species are harvested yearly to meet demand. These migratory tuna species account for 20 percent of the value of all marine capture fisheries and over eight percent of all globally traded seafood.
That level of demand has put significant pressure on tuna populations and other marine creatures. In 2011, the International Union for Conservation of Nature labeled, facing a serious risk of extinction. Tuna fishing also contributes to the bycatch of vulnerable species that travel in the same waters, including sharks, turtles, and seabirds.
Today, a number of alternative protein products designed to replicate tuna already exist—and that number will only grow with further research, investment, and innovation. In 2025 alone, the field has seen several milestones:
​, a Chicago-based startup, secured $5.5 million in seed funding to scale their fungi-based seafood alternatives. Utilizing a proprietary mycoprotein fermentation process, the company produces whole-muscle cuts of seafood such as scallops, tuna, and shrimp, offering a sustainable and allergen-free option compared to traditional seafood. The investment will support production expansion at their new facility and facilitate product launches in select restaurants this year.
The Canadian government invested $5 million in , a Richmond, BC-based company specializing in plant-based sushi and seafood alternatives. This funding, provided through PacifiCan’s Business Scale-up and Productivity program, will enable the company to expand production, increase exports, and create over 40 new jobs in British Columbia. Konscious Foods produces plant-based tuna avocado rolls and a variety of other frozen sushi meals made with Canadian-grown ingredients such as quinoa, tomatoes, and carrots. They are working on developing new seafood alternatives like plant-based smoked salmon, crab cakes, and shrimp.
​, a Berlin-based startup specializing in plant-based seafood, achieved a significant milestone through their partnership with BILLA AG, Austria's leading supermarket chain. Together, they've launched the co-branded TU-NAH Sandwich, now available across BILLA and BILLA PLUS stores in Austria. This collaboration underscores a shared commitment to sustainability and innovation, aiming to redefine the plant-based seafood category and expand its reach across Europe.
Feast your eyes on a few plant-based based tuna products on the market that are helping to meet consumer demand more sustainably—plus a cultivated bluefin currently under development:
(sushi-grade bluefin tuna made with plants)
Photo credit: Impact Food
cell-cultured bluefin tuna toro
Photo credit: BlueNalu
tuna made from plants
Photo credit: Unlimeat
tuna made from seaweed
Photo credit: BettaF!sh
Diversifying our tacklebox
A on the hidden costs of our seafood system closed with a poignant suggestion: “if nothing truly good from the sea is on offer, it might be better to cook something else for dinner.” As alternative seafood continues to advance—delivering products that meet consumer expectations around taste and texture— that “something else” can come without compromise.
Scaling plant-based and cultivated seafood can help meet growing global demand while dramatically reducing the climate and biodiversity impacts of seafood production. These alternatives offer a path to ease pressure on aquatic ecosystems, rebuild overfished stocks, and cut down on bycatch and discards
Building a better food system will require a diversity of solutions. Just as the conservation community must pursue every viable path to protect ocean health, the alternative protein industry must advance multiple technology platforms to produce seafood without the animal.
Alternative seafood is the future of sustainable seafood. To scale this industry, we need bold innovators and committed champions—across climate, biodiversity, public health, and food security—who are ready to make it a global priority. An ocean of opportunity awaits.
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