Pimp My ShrimpWal-Mart environmental practices changing shrimp farming in ThailandLatest practice impacted by omnipresent Wal-Mart: Thai shrimp farming. Crustacean aquaculture, long demonized for destroying mangrove trees and polluting waterways, is the focus of new standards penned by the Global Aquaculture Alliance and backed by Wal-Mart, Red Lobster, and other big seafood purveyors. To make the grade for Wal-Mart -- the U.S.'s biggest single shrimp buyer -- farmers must improve water testing, treat discharge, discontinue antibiotic use, and plant three times as many mangroves as they chop down. As with all Wal-moves, there's controversy: around 80 percent of shrimp farms in Thailand -- the largest exporter of shrimp to the U.S., sending $1.28 billion worth of the delicacy to the states each year -- are so small they lack the resources to operate under the new standards. But when one huge Wal-Mart supplier bought and upgraded some 150 farms, it raised an outcry about consolidation. Don't worry, shrimpers -- we at Wal-Grist are here to tell you there's nothing to fear.
straight to the source: The Wall Street Journal, Kris Hudson and Wilawan Watcharasakwet, 24 Jul 2007 (access ain't free)
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