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Wikipedia

Seaspiracy

Seaspiracy (/sˈspɪrəsi/) is a 2021 documentary film about the environmental impact of fishing directed by and starring Ali Tabrizi, a British filmmaker.[1] The film examines human impacts on marine life and advocates for ending fish consumption.

Seaspiracy
Official poster
Directed byAli Tabrizi
Produced byKip Andersen
Cinematography
  • Ali Tabrizi
  • Lucy Tabrizi
Edited by
  • Ali Tabrizi
  • Lucy Tabrizi
Music byBenjamin Sturley
Production
companies
  • A.U.M. Films
  • Disrupt Studios
Distributed byNetflix
Release date
  • March 24, 2021 (2021-03-24) (Netflix)
Running time
89 minutes
LanguageEnglish

The film explores environmental issues affecting oceans, including plastic pollution, ghost nets and overfishing,[2] and argues that commercial fisheries are the main driver of marine ecosystem destruction.[3] The film rejects the concept of sustainable fishing and criticises several marine conservation organisations, including the Earth Island Institute and its dolphin safe label[4] and the sustainable seafood certifications of the Marine Stewardship Council.[5] It also criticises efforts by organisations to reduce household plastic, contrasting their impact with that of ghost nets.[6] It accuses these initiatives of being a cover-up for the environmental impact of fishing and corruption in the fishing industry.[7][8] Seaspiracy concludes by supporting marine reserves and for ending fish consumption.[9]

The film was produced by Kip Andersen, director of the documentary Cowspiracy,[10] and used the same production team as this previous film. Initial financial support was provided by British entrepreneur Dale Vince, and it was acquired by Netflix in 2020.

The film premiered on Netflix globally in March 2021 and garnered immediate attention in several countries.[11] The film received mixed reviews; reviewers praised it for bringing attention to its subject matter, but it was accused of scientific inaccuracy[10] and was criticised by some ocean experts.[12][13][14] Organisations and individuals interviewed or negatively portrayed in the film disputed its assertions and accused the film of misrepresenting them.[15][16] Seaspiracy also prompted responses from other environmental organisations, academics and seafood industry groups, and several media outlets fact-checked certain statements in the film.

Synopsis edit

 
Marine organisms entangled in a ghost net within the Maldives

Tabrizi acts as both the narrator and protagonist of the film, discovering key pieces of information at the same moment as the viewer. This framing device serves to provide narrative momentum and suspense.[4] The film centers early on the collapse of whale, shark, dolphin and sea turtle populations. The film asserts that the focus of environmental groups on comparatively small consumer plastics like straws has obfuscated the larger problem of plastic waste from fishing gear, or ghost nets, as well as the devastation of bycatch. The film also suggests environmental organizations have been unable to define or effectively implement sustainable fishing, sustainable seafood or dolphin-safe products. These criticisms are particularly focused on the Marine Stewardship Council, the Earth Island Institute and the Plastic Pollution Coalition.[17]

The film's settings are global, including the Taiji dolphin drive hunt in southern Japan, whaling in the Faroe Islands, Thai and Chinese fish markets, coastal West Africa, and salmon aquaculture farms in Scotland. At various moments, Tabrizi and his crew appear to face imminent peril from local authorities or corrupt fishing industry players; some of the action is presented through hidden camera techniques, and animation is used to depict scenes of violence. Activities of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society—an American conservation group focused on direct action at sea—feature prominently in the film, including an extended section documenting illegal fishing practices and worker exploitation in Liberian waters. The film also includes an investigation into modern slavery conditions on Thai fishing vessels, and interviews several survivors.[3][18]

That the cessation of fish consumption is the solution to collapsing fish stocks and human exploitation remains a consistent message throughout the film. Statistics repeatedly buttress this point, including various fish species listed at >90% wild population loss, and the claim that global oceans could be essentially devoid of fish by 2048.[19] The possibility of fish farming aquaculture is introduced, only to be dismissed after a trip to Scotland. The film suggests that aquaculture is untenable due to the problem of feed for farmed fish and the prevalence of disease and coastal degradation.[20]

Production and release edit

Seaspiracy received production support and initial funding by British renewable energy entrepreneur Dale Vince after meeting Cowspiracy director Kip Anderson in 2016.[21] The same production team was used as this previous film.[1] Ali Tabrizi had previously directed a film called Vegan in 2018.[22] Seaspiracy was acquired by Netflix in 2020[21] and released on the platform on March 24, 2021.[23][24]

People featured edit

Reception edit

The documentary was one of the top ten most watched films on Netflix in several countries in the week of its release and generated significant traction on social media.[11]

Critical response edit

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 75% based on 8 critic reviews, and an average rating of 7.7/10.[25]

Natalia Winkelman of The New York Times gave a mixed-to-negative review, concluding that the film "does present some pieces of reporting — including an inquiry into dolphin-safe tuna can labels — that are surprising and memorable. But even the film's notable points seem to emerge only briefly before sinking beneath the surface, lost in a sea of murky conspiratorial thinking."[4]

Aswathi Pacha also reviewed the film negatively in The Hindu, citing concerns over its scientific veracity and accusations of misrepresentation from participants.[26]

Liz Allen of Forbes was also critical of the film, writing "While perhaps produced with good intentions, Seaspiracy fails to provide a critical lens to the problems it unveils".[14][27]

John Serba of Decider said, "Seaspiracy isn't the purest form of documentary journalism, but Tabrizi makes his point with enough principled persuasion to make it worth your time," while also questioning its tone, saying "some of the fishing industry's troublesome ethical quandaries occur in the shadows, but to call its corrupt elements conspiratorial is almost pointlessly sensational".[8] The Independent rated it 4 out of 5 stars and called it a "shocking indictment of the commercial fishing industry".[28]

Emma Stefanski of Thrillist said, "If shock and awe are what it takes to get the message across, then Seaspiracy is effective, if not particularly multifaceted."[29]

Common Sense Media gave the film a 4 out of 5 stars and 15+ rating, calling it "tough but necessary viewing" and "backed with evidence from journalists, authors, marine biologists, oceanographers, frontline activists, and industry insiders". It questions the use of director Ali Tabrizi as protagonist to be followed around.[30]

Writing for the American socialist publication Jacobin, Spencer Roberts says that the film "is not without its faults. Its interview style is abrasive. It has excessive animation. It makes a couple of statistical misinterpretations and several oversimplifications. Yet the film is mainly accurate and devastatingly detailed."[31] Addressing the disputes over its scientific accuracy, he says "[i]t's fair to say that Seaspiracy cited some studies that can be considered dated or disputed, but it also left out some of the most harrowing statistics published in recent years", including the bycatch of 8.5 million sea turtles from 1990 to 2008,[32] total fish hauls peaking in 1996,[33] and perhaps 25% of all fishing ships using forced labor.[31][34]

Responses from animal rights groups edit

PETA wrote the movie "is not to be missed"[35] and encouraged readers to host watch parties.[36]

In 2022, the film won PETA's Oscat award for best picture.[37]

Responses from environmental groups edit

Greenpeace commended the film for promoting various marine issues, but challenged the conclusion of abstaining from fish consumption, distinguishing between industrial fishing and traditional harvesting. Greenpeace instead suggested alternate solutions.[38][39] A representative of Fauna and Flora International wrote that the film has "bitterly divided the environmental community" and described its interpretation of scientific studies as "highly problematic and often woefully misleading." Although also questioning its "western-centric and absolutist perspective", it accepted that it was "broadly right on some central issues... with significant caveats".[40]

Charles Clover of Blue Marine Foundation and author of the book The End of the Line criticised the film's scientific accuracy, saying "there are a few jaw-dropping factual errors" such as its framing of whale strandings. He said such strandings have a variety of causes other than plastic pollution alone, and accused Seaspiracy of deriving its narrative from previous documentaries, such as the film adaptation of his book. Nonetheless, he praised its communication of marine fisheries and conservation issues to a new audience, stating "[t]he problem of overfishing is immense, global, remote, horrifying and it is really hard to get people to focus on. Until now, Tabrizi's generation thought banning plastic straws was more important. But it isn't. Overfishing is." Although he found a "lot to admire" in the film's criticisms of the fishing industry and sustainable seafood certification organisations, he called the film's conclusion of not eating fish "thoroughly unsatisfactory".[41]

Environmental journalism outlets Earther (a publication of Gizmodo) and Hakai Magazine both gave negative reviews. They both criticised the film for suggesting that previous media had not covered the facts discussed in the film, and questioned its tone and accuracy.[12][22] A reviewer in Hakai Magazine wrote, "had Tabrizi looked at any of these issues in greater depth, he'd have found that journalists have been covering these sorts of stories for years and have not glossed over the nuance."[12]

Responses from seafood industry groups edit

Internal documents leaked before the film's release authored by the National Fisheries Institute, a trade group representing the US seafood industry, revealed a new media strategy to protect the fishing industry and to characterize the then-unreleased documentary as a "dishonest attack".[42] The National Fisheries Institute appealed to Netflix ahead of the film's release to "distinguish between legitimate documentaries and propaganda", stating "audiences will not recognize the film's true agenda [as] a vegan indoctrination movie".[16]

After the movie was released, a spokesperson for Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation (SSPO) said the film's coverage of Scottish salmon aquaculture was "wrong, misleading and inaccurate".[43] The Global Aquaculture Alliance also criticised the film, saying "reputable NGOs have worked tirelessly with industry over the past 20-plus years to continually improve the lives of the people working in aquaculture and fisheries as well as the ecosystems in which aquaculture and fisheries are practiced", and suggested abandoning fisheries and aquaculture would "abandon the approximately 250 million people employed by the industry and rob billions of people of a healthful source of protein".[16]

Responses from academics edit

Bryce Stewart, a University of York marine ecologist and fisheries biologist, criticised the film's scientific accuracy and neutrality, calling it "the worst kind of journalism" and questioning its lack of coverage of the impacts of climate change on oceans. He said that "the biggest error is to say that sustainable fisheries don't exist. This is like saying that sustainable agriculture doesn't exist. All food production systems have an impact on the natural world, but obviously some more than others." He acknowledged "the movie was right to highlight overfishing as the biggest current threat to marine biodiversity. This is widely accepted by scientists and the evidence for this is very strong".[10][44][45]

Daniel Pauly, project leader of the Sea Around Us project at the Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries at the University of British Columbia, wrote in Vox that the documentary "make[s] the important point that industrial fishing is... a too often out-of-control, sometimes criminal enterprise that needs to be reined in and regulated." However, he said it also "undermines [its message] with an avalanche of falsehoods", citing its coverage of marine debris, bycatch and sustainable fishing, as well as "blames the ocean conservation community, i.e., the very NGOs trying to fix things, rather than the industrial companies actually causing the problem".[13]

In an article in Nature Ecology and Evolution, Dyhia Belhabib criticised the film's conclusion of ending fish consumption, calling this "embedded in white privilege and colonialism" and "[ignoring] that more than 90% of the global fishing effort is small-scale and coastal in nature". She proposed management solutions and decolonisation of ocean science and advocacy.[46]

Responses from those featured edit

The Marine Stewardship Council, Earth Island Institute and Plastic Pollution Coalition disputed their negative portrayal in the documentary, and suggested that their representatives' comments were cherry-picked.[17][47][48] Oceana disputed the statement that they receive funding from the seafood industry.[49] Christina Hicks, an academic at Lancaster University and James Cook University who appeared in the film, did not endorse it. She said she committed her career to the fishing industry, in which "there are issues but also progress and fish remain critical to food and nutrition security in many vulnerable geographies".[15][43] However, The Guardian columnist George Monbiot expressed his support for the film and its message. While acknowledging some inaccuracies, Monbiot says that the main point of the film is correct: the fishing industry is the greatest cause of the ecological destruction of the oceans, and cites the 2019 IPBES report as evidence to back this assertion.[50] The marine conservation biologist Callum Roberts from the University of Exeter also argued against criticism. He said "my colleagues may rue the statistics, but the basic thrust of it is we are doing a huge amount of damage to the ocean and that's true. At some point you run out. Whether it's 2048 or 2079, the question is: 'Is the trajectory in the wrong direction or the right direction?'"[15]

Scientific accuracy edit

The scientific accuracy of several statements in Seaspiracy has been questioned by several fisheries scientists[13][15][51] and marine conservationists.[12][41] BBC News, Newsweek and Radio Times have each written a fact check article about the film.[19][48][52]

Fishing nets versus plastic straws as marine debris edit

 
A turtle entangled in a ghost net
 
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch in 2017

In Seaspiracy, narrator Tabrizi criticises a public focus on plastic straws, stating that they only account for 0.03% of ocean plastic. He contrasts this with fishing nets, saying they make up 46% of the Great Pacific garbage patch. The fishing net statement derives from a 2018 study, which examines floating marine debris by weight. The study found that at least 46% of floating plastic in the Great Pacific garbage patch came from fishing nets.[53][54][55]

According to the BBC News fact check, the share of plastic straws in ocean plastic (0.03%) seems to be calculated using numbers from two studies. One study is on plastic straws on coastlines, the other on floating marine plastic in the Great Pacific garbage patch. The fact check cites Jenna Jambeck, the author of the coastline study, saying "no-one really knows how much of it is straws, but experts agree that it is certainly a lot less than dumped fishing gear." The author of the latter study on the Great Pacific garbage patch, is quoted as saying "[fishing gear] fragments much more slowly and is also very buoyant; prime candidates to hang around in the GPGP", as opposed to thinner plastics like straws and bags, which disintegrate and sink.[19]

An article in Forbes concluded that the film's focus on the Great Pacific garbage patch was "misleading", as this region of the ocean accumulates buoyant plastics and therefore "does not provide a particularly accurate depiction of the marine plastic in the entire ocean overall".[27]

Empty oceans by 2048 statement edit

The film says that a leading fisheries expert found "that if current fishing trends continue, we will see virtually empty oceans by the year 2048."[53]

This prediction originates from the conclusion section of a 2006 study by a team of marine ecologists led by Dr. Boris Worm published in Science.[56] In the final paragraphs of the study, the authors extrapolated from the percentage of fisheries that have already collapsed and predicted that 32 years later, no more fish would be caught in the ocean.[56][57] When interviewed for the BBC fact-check article about Seaspiracy in 2021, Worm said, "the 2006 paper is now 15 years old and most of the data in it is almost 20 years old. Since then, we have seen increasing efforts in many regions to rebuild depleted fish populations". The BBC also noted that other experts had taken issue with the original 2006 study.[19]

Dolphin-safe tuna labels edit

 
A dolphin underwater

The film criticises dolphin safe labels on tuna and says that "the internationally recognized seafood label was a complete fabrication since it guaranteed nothing".[53] This is in response to Mark Palmer, associate director of the International Marine Mammal Project of the Earth Island Institute, who says on camera that "dolphin safe" tuna cannot be guaranteed, and that observers can be bribed. Palmer has accused the documentary of taking him out of context.[15][48]

Senior fisheries scientist Sara McDonald of the Monterey Bay Aquarium was quoted by Newsweek in a Seaspiracy fact check article: "The U.S. dolphin-safe program has been very effective. Dolphin mortality in the 1980s was 130,000. In 2018, there were 819 documented deaths." However, a representative of the Natural Resources Defense Council stated that although "the U.S. laws are good if everyone is being honest, that doesn't mean nothing ever gets in. [Law enforcement] can't catch it all." Newsweek's fact-check article concluded that dolphin safe labels cannot guarantee that no dolphins are harmed during fishing.[48]

See also edit

References edit

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  53. ^ a b c "Seaspiracy (2021) - Transcript". Scraps from the loft. March 30, 2021. Archived from the original on April 10, 2021. Retrieved March 31, 2021. Well, the latest study actually showed that 46% of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is fishing nets alone(...)But perhaps one of the most shocking facts of all came from one of the world's leading fisheries experts estimating that if current fishing trends continue, we will see virtually empty oceans by the year 2048.(...)I couldn't believe what I was hearing. The internationally recognized seafood label was a complete fabrication since it guaranteed nothing. At this point, I began to wonder what else was being covered up
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  55. ^ Lebreton, L.; Slat, B.; Ferrari, F.; Sainte-Rose, B.; Aitken, J.; Marthouse, R.; Hajbane, S.; Cunsolo, S.; Schwarz, A.; Levivier, A.; Noble, K. (March 22, 2018). "Evidence that the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is rapidly accumulating plastic". Scientific Reports. 8 (1): 4666. Bibcode:2018NatSR...8.4666L. doi:10.1038/s41598-018-22939-w. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 5864935. PMID 29568057. Over three-quarters of the GPGP mass was carried by debris larger than 5 cm and at least 46% was comprised of fishing nets.
  56. ^ a b Worm, Boris (2006). "Impacts of Biodiversity Loss on Ocean Ecosystem Services". Science. 314 (5800): 787–790. Bibcode:2006Sci...314..787W. doi:10.1126/science.1132294. PMID 17082450. S2CID 37235806. from the original on March 3, 2024. Retrieved April 9, 2021. Conclusions. Positive relationships between diversity and ecosystem functions and services were found using experimental (Fig. 1) and correlative approaches along trajectories of diversity loss (Figs. 2 and 3) and recovery (Fig. 4). Our data highlight the societal consequences of an ongoing erosion of diversity that appears to be accelerating on a global scale (Fig. 3A). This trend is of serious concern because it projects the global collapse of all taxa currently fished by the mid–21st century (based on the extrapolation of regression in Fig. 3A to 100% in the year 2048).  
  57. ^ "Seaspiracy Facts". from the original on April 16, 2021. Retrieved April 15, 2021.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Seaspiracy at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Seaspiracy at IMDb  
  • Is Netflix's Seaspiracy film right about fishing damaging oceans? BBC News, Reality Check, 2021-04-09

seaspiracy, 2021, documentary, film, about, environmental, impact, fishing, directed, starring, tabrizi, british, filmmaker, film, examines, human, impacts, marine, life, advocates, ending, fish, consumption, official, posterdirected, byali, tabriziproduced, b. Seaspiracy s iː ˈ s p ɪ r e s i is a 2021 documentary film about the environmental impact of fishing directed by and starring Ali Tabrizi a British filmmaker 1 The film examines human impacts on marine life and advocates for ending fish consumption SeaspiracyOfficial posterDirected byAli TabriziProduced byKip AndersenCinematographyAli Tabrizi Lucy TabriziEdited byAli Tabrizi Lucy TabriziMusic byBenjamin SturleyProductioncompaniesA U M Films Disrupt StudiosDistributed byNetflixRelease dateMarch 24 2021 2021 03 24 Netflix Running time89 minutesLanguageEnglish The film explores environmental issues affecting oceans including plastic pollution ghost nets and overfishing 2 and argues that commercial fisheries are the main driver of marine ecosystem destruction 3 The film rejects the concept of sustainable fishing and criticises several marine conservation organisations including the Earth Island Institute and its dolphin safe label 4 and the sustainable seafood certifications of the Marine Stewardship Council 5 It also criticises efforts by organisations to reduce household plastic contrasting their impact with that of ghost nets 6 It accuses these initiatives of being a cover up for the environmental impact of fishing and corruption in the fishing industry 7 8 Seaspiracy concludes by supporting marine reserves and for ending fish consumption 9 The film was produced by Kip Andersen director of the documentary Cowspiracy 10 and used the same production team as this previous film Initial financial support was provided by British entrepreneur Dale Vince and it was acquired by Netflix in 2020 The film premiered on Netflix globally in March 2021 and garnered immediate attention in several countries 11 The film received mixed reviews reviewers praised it for bringing attention to its subject matter but it was accused of scientific inaccuracy 10 and was criticised by some ocean experts 12 13 14 Organisations and individuals interviewed or negatively portrayed in the film disputed its assertions and accused the film of misrepresenting them 15 16 Seaspiracy also prompted responses from other environmental organisations academics and seafood industry groups and several media outlets fact checked certain statements in the film Contents 1 Synopsis 2 Production and release 3 People featured 4 Reception 4 1 Critical response 4 2 Responses from animal rights groups 4 3 Responses from environmental groups 4 4 Responses from seafood industry groups 4 5 Responses from academics 4 6 Responses from those featured 5 Scientific accuracy 5 1 Fishing nets versus plastic straws as marine debris 5 2 Empty oceans by 2048 statement 5 3 Dolphin safe tuna labels 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksSynopsis edit nbsp Marine organisms entangled in a ghost net within the Maldives Tabrizi acts as both the narrator and protagonist of the film discovering key pieces of information at the same moment as the viewer This framing device serves to provide narrative momentum and suspense 4 The film centers early on the collapse of whale shark dolphin and sea turtle populations The film asserts that the focus of environmental groups on comparatively small consumer plastics like straws has obfuscated the larger problem of plastic waste from fishing gear or ghost nets as well as the devastation of bycatch The film also suggests environmental organizations have been unable to define or effectively implement sustainable fishing sustainable seafood or dolphin safe products These criticisms are particularly focused on the Marine Stewardship Council the Earth Island Institute and the Plastic Pollution Coalition 17 The film s settings are global including the Taiji dolphin drive hunt in southern Japan whaling in the Faroe Islands Thai and Chinese fish markets coastal West Africa and salmon aquaculture farms in Scotland At various moments Tabrizi and his crew appear to face imminent peril from local authorities or corrupt fishing industry players some of the action is presented through hidden camera techniques and animation is used to depict scenes of violence Activities of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society an American conservation group focused on direct action at sea feature prominently in the film including an extended section documenting illegal fishing practices and worker exploitation in Liberian waters The film also includes an investigation into modern slavery conditions on Thai fishing vessels and interviews several survivors 3 18 That the cessation of fish consumption is the solution to collapsing fish stocks and human exploitation remains a consistent message throughout the film Statistics repeatedly buttress this point including various fish species listed at gt 90 wild population loss and the claim that global oceans could be essentially devoid of fish by 2048 19 The possibility of fish farming aquaculture is introduced only to be dismissed after a trip to Scotland The film suggests that aquaculture is untenable due to the problem of feed for farmed fish and the prevalence of disease and coastal degradation 20 Production and release editSeaspiracy received production support and initial funding by British renewable energy entrepreneur Dale Vince after meeting Cowspiracy director Kip Anderson in 2016 21 The same production team was used as this previous film 1 Ali Tabrizi had previously directed a film called Vegan in 2018 22 Seaspiracy was acquired by Netflix in 2020 21 and released on the platform on March 24 2021 23 24 People featured editRic O Barry Jonathan Balcombe Sylvia Earle George Monbiot Callum Roberts 15 Chris Langdon Cyrill Gutsch Richard Oppenlander Paul de Gelder Steve Trent of Environmental Justice Foundation Lori Marino Karmenu Vella former European Commissioner for Fishing and Maritime Affairs Dominique Barnes Co founder of New Wave Foods amp Marine Biologist Gary Stokes Michael Greger from Sea Shepherd Conservation Society Paul Watson Lamya Essemlali Peter Hammarstedt Tamara ArenovichReception editThe documentary was one of the top ten most watched films on Netflix in several countries in the week of its release and generated significant traction on social media 11 Critical response edit On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 75 based on 8 critic reviews and an average rating of 7 7 10 25 Natalia Winkelman of The New York Times gave a mixed to negative review concluding that the film does present some pieces of reporting including an inquiry into dolphin safe tuna can labels that are surprising and memorable But even the film s notable points seem to emerge only briefly before sinking beneath the surface lost in a sea of murky conspiratorial thinking 4 Aswathi Pacha also reviewed the film negatively in The Hindu citing concerns over its scientific veracity and accusations of misrepresentation from participants 26 Liz Allen of Forbes was also critical of the film writing While perhaps produced with good intentions Seaspiracy fails to provide a critical lens to the problems it unveils 14 27 John Serba of Decider said Seaspiracy isn t the purest form of documentary journalism but Tabrizi makes his point with enough principled persuasion to make it worth your time while also questioning its tone saying some of the fishing industry s troublesome ethical quandaries occur in the shadows but to call its corrupt elements conspiratorial is almost pointlessly sensational 8 The Independent rated it 4 out of 5 stars and called it a shocking indictment of the commercial fishing industry 28 Emma Stefanski of Thrillist said If shock and awe are what it takes to get the message across then Seaspiracy is effective if not particularly multifaceted 29 Common Sense Media gave the film a 4 out of 5 stars and 15 rating calling it tough but necessary viewing and backed with evidence from journalists authors marine biologists oceanographers frontline activists and industry insiders It questions the use of director Ali Tabrizi as protagonist to be followed around 30 Writing for the American socialist publication Jacobin Spencer Roberts says that the film is not without its faults Its interview style is abrasive It has excessive animation It makes a couple of statistical misinterpretations and several oversimplifications Yet the film is mainly accurate and devastatingly detailed 31 Addressing the disputes over its scientific accuracy he says i t s fair to say that Seaspiracy cited some studies that can be considered dated or disputed but it also left out some of the most harrowing statistics published in recent years including the bycatch of 8 5 million sea turtles from 1990 to 2008 32 total fish hauls peaking in 1996 33 and perhaps 25 of all fishing ships using forced labor 31 34 Responses from animal rights groups edit PETA wrote the movie is not to be missed 35 and encouraged readers to host watch parties 36 In 2022 the film won PETA s Oscat award for best picture 37 Responses from environmental groups edit Greenpeace commended the film for promoting various marine issues but challenged the conclusion of abstaining from fish consumption distinguishing between industrial fishing and traditional harvesting Greenpeace instead suggested alternate solutions 38 39 A representative of Fauna and Flora International wrote that the film has bitterly divided the environmental community and described its interpretation of scientific studies as highly problematic and often woefully misleading Although also questioning its western centric and absolutist perspective it accepted that it was broadly right on some central issues with significant caveats 40 Charles Clover of Blue Marine Foundation and author of the book The End of the Line criticised the film s scientific accuracy saying there are a few jaw dropping factual errors such as its framing of whale strandings He said such strandings have a variety of causes other than plastic pollution alone and accused Seaspiracy of deriving its narrative from previous documentaries such as the film adaptation of his book Nonetheless he praised its communication of marine fisheries and conservation issues to a new audience stating t he problem of overfishing is immense global remote horrifying and it is really hard to get people to focus on Until now Tabrizi s generation thought banning plastic straws was more important But it isn t Overfishing is Although he found a lot to admire in the film s criticisms of the fishing industry and sustainable seafood certification organisations he called the film s conclusion of not eating fish thoroughly unsatisfactory 41 Environmental journalism outlets Earther a publication of Gizmodo and Hakai Magazine both gave negative reviews They both criticised the film for suggesting that previous media had not covered the facts discussed in the film and questioned its tone and accuracy 12 22 A reviewer in Hakai Magazine wrote had Tabrizi looked at any of these issues in greater depth he d have found that journalists have been covering these sorts of stories for years and have not glossed over the nuance 12 Responses from seafood industry groups edit Internal documents leaked before the film s release authored by the National Fisheries Institute a trade group representing the US seafood industry revealed a new media strategy to protect the fishing industry and to characterize the then unreleased documentary as a dishonest attack 42 The National Fisheries Institute appealed to Netflix ahead of the film s release to distinguish between legitimate documentaries and propaganda stating audiences will not recognize the film s true agenda as a vegan indoctrination movie 16 After the movie was released a spokesperson for Scottish Salmon Producers Organisation SSPO said the film s coverage of Scottish salmon aquaculture was wrong misleading and inaccurate 43 The Global Aquaculture Alliance also criticised the film saying reputable NGOs have worked tirelessly with industry over the past 20 plus years to continually improve the lives of the people working in aquaculture and fisheries as well as the ecosystems in which aquaculture and fisheries are practiced and suggested abandoning fisheries and aquaculture would abandon the approximately 250 million people employed by the industry and rob billions of people of a healthful source of protein 16 Responses from academics edit Bryce Stewart a University of York marine ecologist and fisheries biologist criticised the film s scientific accuracy and neutrality calling it the worst kind of journalism and questioning its lack of coverage of the impacts of climate change on oceans He said that the biggest error is to say that sustainable fisheries don t exist This is like saying that sustainable agriculture doesn t exist All food production systems have an impact on the natural world but obviously some more than others He acknowledged the movie was right to highlight overfishing as the biggest current threat to marine biodiversity This is widely accepted by scientists and the evidence for this is very strong 10 44 45 Daniel Pauly project leader of the Sea Around Us project at the Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries at the University of British Columbia wrote in Vox that the documentary make s the important point that industrial fishing is a too often out of control sometimes criminal enterprise that needs to be reined in and regulated However he said it also undermines its message with an avalanche of falsehoods citing its coverage of marine debris bycatch and sustainable fishing as well as blames the ocean conservation community i e the very NGOs trying to fix things rather than the industrial companies actually causing the problem 13 In an article in Nature Ecology and Evolution Dyhia Belhabib criticised the film s conclusion of ending fish consumption calling this embedded in white privilege and colonialism and ignoring that more than 90 of the global fishing effort is small scale and coastal in nature She proposed management solutions and decolonisation of ocean science and advocacy 46 Responses from those featured edit The Marine Stewardship Council Earth Island Institute and Plastic Pollution Coalition disputed their negative portrayal in the documentary and suggested that their representatives comments were cherry picked 17 47 48 Oceana disputed the statement that they receive funding from the seafood industry 49 Christina Hicks an academic at Lancaster University and James Cook University who appeared in the film did not endorse it She said she committed her career to the fishing industry in which there are issues but also progress and fish remain critical to food and nutrition security in many vulnerable geographies 15 43 However The Guardian columnist George Monbiot expressed his support for the film and its message While acknowledging some inaccuracies Monbiot says that the main point of the film is correct the fishing industry is the greatest cause of the ecological destruction of the oceans and cites the 2019 IPBES report as evidence to back this assertion 50 The marine conservation biologist Callum Roberts from the University of Exeter also argued against criticism He said my colleagues may rue the statistics but the basic thrust of it is we are doing a huge amount of damage to the ocean and that s true At some point you run out Whether it s 2048 or 2079 the question is Is the trajectory in the wrong direction or the right direction 15 Scientific accuracy editThe scientific accuracy of several statements in Seaspiracy has been questioned by several fisheries scientists 13 15 51 and marine conservationists 12 41 BBC News Newsweek and Radio Times have each written a fact check article about the film 19 48 52 Fishing nets versus plastic straws as marine debris edit nbsp A turtle entangled in a ghost net nbsp The Great Pacific Garbage Patch in 2017 In Seaspiracy narrator Tabrizi criticises a public focus on plastic straws stating that they only account for 0 03 of ocean plastic He contrasts this with fishing nets saying they make up 46 of the Great Pacific garbage patch The fishing net statement derives from a 2018 study which examines floating marine debris by weight The study found that at least 46 of floating plastic in the Great Pacific garbage patch came from fishing nets 53 54 55 According to the BBC News fact check the share of plastic straws in ocean plastic 0 03 seems to be calculated using numbers from two studies One study is on plastic straws on coastlines the other on floating marine plastic in the Great Pacific garbage patch The fact check cites Jenna Jambeck the author of the coastline study saying no one really knows how much of it is straws but experts agree that it is certainly a lot less than dumped fishing gear The author of the latter study on the Great Pacific garbage patch is quoted as saying fishing gear fragments much more slowly and is also very buoyant prime candidates to hang around in the GPGP as opposed to thinner plastics like straws and bags which disintegrate and sink 19 An article in Forbes concluded that the film s focus on the Great Pacific garbage patch was misleading as this region of the ocean accumulates buoyant plastics and therefore does not provide a particularly accurate depiction of the marine plastic in the entire ocean overall 27 Empty oceans by 2048 statement edit The film says that a leading fisheries expert found that if current fishing trends continue we will see virtually empty oceans by the year 2048 53 This prediction originates from the conclusion section of a 2006 study by a team of marine ecologists led by Dr Boris Worm published in Science 56 In the final paragraphs of the study the authors extrapolated from the percentage of fisheries that have already collapsed and predicted that 32 years later no more fish would be caught in the ocean 56 57 When interviewed for the BBC fact check article about Seaspiracy in 2021 Worm said the 2006 paper is now 15 years old and most of the data in it is almost 20 years old Since then we have seen increasing efforts in many regions to rebuild depleted fish populations The BBC also noted that other experts had taken issue with the original 2006 study 19 Dolphin safe tuna labels edit nbsp A dolphin underwater The film criticises dolphin safe labels on tuna and says that the internationally recognized seafood label was a complete fabrication since it guaranteed nothing 53 This is in response to Mark Palmer associate director of the International Marine Mammal Project of the Earth Island Institute who says on camera that dolphin safe tuna cannot be guaranteed and that observers can be bribed Palmer has accused the documentary of taking him out of context 15 48 Senior fisheries scientist Sara McDonald of the Monterey Bay Aquarium was quoted by Newsweek in a Seaspiracy fact check article The U S dolphin safe program has been very effective Dolphin mortality in the 1980s was 130 000 In 2018 there were 819 documented deaths However a representative of the Natural Resources Defense Council stated that although the U S laws are good if everyone is being honest that doesn t mean nothing ever gets in Law enforcement can t catch it all Newsweek s fact check article concluded that dolphin safe labels cannot guarantee that no dolphins are harmed during fishing 48 See also editHuman impact on marine life The Cove a film about dolphin fishing The End of the Line a book and film about overfishing and the effect of climate change on wild fish The Outlaw Ocean a book and upcoming film about crime at sea List of vegan mediaReferences edit a b Meet the 27 year old filmmaker behind Netflix s controversial documentary Seaspiracy The Independent March 31 2021 Archived from the original on March 31 2021 Retrieved April 4 2021 Seaspiracy what is Ali and Lucy Tabrizi s shocking Netflix fishing industry documentary about The Scotsman March 26 2021 Archived from the original on May 26 2021 Retrieved March 26 2021 a b Faut il cesser de manger du poisson Le Devoir in French March 27 2021 Archived from the original on March 3 2024 Retrieved March 28 2021 Avec ce documentaire tourne dans plusieurs regions maritimes du globe le realisateur Ali Tabrizi cherche donc a mettre en lumiere ce qu il considere comme un aveuglement collectif face a la degradation des ecosystemes marins Et pour lui il ne fait aucun doute que les pecheries commerciales sont le principal moteur de destruction de ces milieux naturels qui sont le fruit de centaines de millions d annees d evolution a b c Winkelman Natalia March 24 2021 Seaspiracy Review Got Any Scandals Go Fish The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 25 2021 Retrieved March 26 2021 Our Seaspiracy response Marine Stewardship Council Marine Stewardship Council Archived from the original on March 26 2021 Retrieved March 26 2021 Seaspiracy Summary amp Analysis Big Lie Of The Fishing Industry DMT Digital Mafia Talkies April 11 2021 Archived from the original on April 11 2021 Retrieved April 11 2021 Back Grace March 26 2021 Netflix s New Documentary Seaspiracy Is As Eye Opening As It Is Terrifying ELLE Archived from the original on March 26 2021 Retrieved March 26 2021 a b Stream It Or Skip It Seaspiracy on Netflix a Revealing Documentary Targeting the Corruption of the Commercial Fishing Industry Decider March 24 2021 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 Seaspiracy il lato oscuro della pesca La Stampa in Italian March 26 2021 Archived from the original on March 26 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 La tesi di Seaspiracy e che non c e grigio e bianco appunto ma solo riserve marine e smettere di mangiare pesce di tutti i tipi a b c Gatten Emma April 1 2021 Seaspiracy fact vs fiction The truth behind Netflix s controversial new documentary The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on April 9 2021 Retrieved April 1 2021 The film s producer Kip Andersen is a prominent vegan who made the earlier documentary Cowspiracy and has set up a vegan meal planning subscription service that is linked from the Seaspiracy website a b Korban d korban Demi March 29 2021 Seaspiracy leaps into Netflix top 10 as social media frenzy hits seafood industry Intrafish Intrafish Latest seafood aquaculture and fisheries news Archived from the original on March 29 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 a b c d Seaspiracy Harms More Than It Educates Hakai Magazine Archived from the original on April 6 2021 Retrieved April 7 2021 a b c Pauly Daniel April 13 2021 What Netflix s Seaspiracy gets wrong about fishing explained by a marine biologist Vox Archived from the original on April 13 2021 Retrieved April 13 2021 a b Allen Liz Seaspiracy A Call To Action Or A Vehicle Of Misinformation Forbes Archived from the original on May 22 2021 Retrieved May 22 2021 a b c d e f Seaspiracy Netflix documentary accused of misrepresentation by participants The Guardian March 31 2021 Archived from the original on March 31 2021 Retrieved March 31 2021 a b c Seaspiracy film assails fishing and aquaculture sectors that seem ready for a good fight Global Aquaculture Alliance March 26 2021 Archived from the original on March 26 2021 Retrieved March 29 2021 a b McVeigh Karen March 31 2021 Seaspiracy Netflix documentary accused of misrepresentation by participants The Guardian Archived from the original on April 7 2021 Retrieved April 7 2021 Berlatsky Noah March 23 2021 Seaspiracy Explores the Need for Systemic Change to Save Our Oceans The Progressive Archived from the original on March 3 2024 Retrieved March 26 2021 a b c d Is Netflix s Seaspiracy film right about fishing damaging oceans BBC News April 8 2021 Archived from the original on April 9 2021 Retrieved April 9 2021 McEachern Megan April 20 2021 Seaspiracy facts challenged by Scottish fish farming organisations as documentary controversy continues The Sunday Post Archived from the original on January 28 2022 a b Norris Phil March 4 2021 Netflix releases trailer for Dale Vince s new documentary GloucestershireLive Archived from the original on May 22 2021 Retrieved May 22 2021 a b Don t Watch Netflix s Seaspiracy Earther April 7 2021 Archived from the original on April 7 2021 Retrieved April 7 2021 Tabrizi Ali March 24 2021 Seaspiracy Documentary Ali Tabrizi Richard O Barry Lucy Tabrizi Lori Marino archived from the original on March 28 2021 retrieved March 28 2021 Facebook Facebook Seaspiracy March 23 2021 Archived from the original on May 26 2021 Retrieved March 29 2021 Seaspiracy 2021 Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on April 12 2021 Retrieved April 18 2021 Pacha Aswathi April 3 2021 Seaspiracy review Fact and fiction meet fish in controversial Netflix documentary The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Archived from the original on April 3 2021 Retrieved December 13 2021 a b Allen Liz Why Seaspiracy s Focus On The Great Pacific Garbage Patch Is Misleading Forbes Archived from the original on June 2 2021 Retrieved June 2 2021 Seaspiracy is a shocking indictment of the fishing industry review The Independent March 30 2021 Archived from the original on April 3 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 Stefansky Emma March 25 2021 Netflix s Seaspiracy Documentary Unearths the Fishing Industry s Dark Secrets Thrillist Archived from the original on March 27 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 Seaspiracy Movie Review Common Sense Media March 24 2021 Archived from the original on April 28 2021 Retrieved April 1 2021 a b Roberts Spencer April 14 2021 What Seaspiracy Gets Right About the Exploitative Fishing Industry Jacobin Archived from the original on April 15 2021 Retrieved April 16 2021 Wallace Bryan P Lewison Rebecca L et al 2010 Global patterns of marine turtle bycatch Conservation Letters 3 3 131 142 Bibcode 2010ConL 3 131W doi 10 1111 j 1755 263X 2010 00105 x S2CID 2639284 Pauly Daniel Zeller Dirk 2016 Catch reconstructions reveal that global marine fisheries catches are higher than reported and declining Nature Communications 7 10244 10244 Bibcode 2016NatCo 710244P doi 10 1038 ncomms10244 PMC 4735634 PMID 26784963 McDonald Gavin G Costello Christopher et al 2021 Satellites can reveal global extent of forced labor in the world s fishing fleet PNAS 118 3 e2016238117 Bibcode 2021PNAS 11820162M doi 10 1073 pnas 2016238117 PMC 7826370 PMID 33431679 S2CID 231586627 Sullivan Katherine March 26 2021 Seaspiracy Dives Deep Into Bycatch and Dolphin Safe Tuna Scandals peta org Archived from the original on March 27 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 How to Host a Watch Party for Netflix s Seaspiracy PETA March 24 2021 Archived from the original on March 24 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 Vlessing Etan March 17 2022 Zendaya The Lost Daughter Candyman Among PETA Oscat Winners The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on March 22 2022 Retrieved March 22 2022 The best picture Oscat went to Seaspiracy Netflix s documentary by director Ali Tabrizi about the devastation the fishing industry has brought to marine animals and ecosystems Protecting the Oceans why turning vegan can t be the only answer Greenpeace International Archived from the original on April 11 2021 Retrieved April 10 2021 Seaspiracy the movie was chilling but what can I do now Greenpeace Aotearoa Archived from the original on April 2 2021 Retrieved April 3 2021 Seaspiracy the urgent messages behind the flawed argument www fauna flora org April 6 2021 Archived from the original on April 12 2021 Retrieved April 7 2021 a b Seaspiracy should we stop eating fish Blue Marine Foundation March 31 2021 Archived from the original on April 1 2021 Retrieved April 1 2021 Baker Emily March 16 2021 Leaked Documents From Fishing Industry Expose Plan To Attack Seaspiracy Netflix Release Plant Based News Archived from the original on March 30 2021 Retrieved April 3 2021 a b Viewers react to controversial new Netflix documentary Seaspiracy The Independent March 30 2021 Archived from the original on March 29 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 Everything you need to know about Seaspiracy the controversial new Netflix documentary inews co uk March 30 2021 Archived from the original on March 31 2021 Retrieved March 31 2021 Kleinman Jake April 9 2021 Seaspiracy fact check An expert debunks the controversial Netflix doc Inverse Archived from the original on April 9 2021 Retrieved April 10 2021 Belhabib Dyhia May 12 2021 Ocean science and advocacy work better when decolonized Nature Ecology amp Evolution 5 6 709 710 Bibcode 2021NatEE 5 709B doi 10 1038 s41559 021 01477 1 ISSN 2397 334X PMID 33981027 S2CID 234485402 Marine organisations and experts react to hit Netflix documentary Seaspiracy The Independent March 29 2021 Archived from the original on March 29 2021 Retrieved March 29 2021 a b c d Fact checking dolphin safe label claims made by Netflix doc Seaspiracy Newsweek April 1 2021 Archived from the original on April 3 2021 Retrieved April 3 2021 A statement from Oceana on Netflix s Seaspiracy Oceana Archived from the original on April 1 2021 Retrieved March 29 2021 Seaspiracy shows why we must treat fish not as seafood but as wildlife George Monbiot The Guardian April 7 2021 Archived from the original on April 9 2021 Retrieved April 7 2021 Horton Helena March 31 2021 Netflix documentary Seaspiracy under fire from scientists The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Retrieved April 7 2021 Seaspiracy fact checker Truth behind the Netflix documentary Radio Times Archived from the original on April 15 2021 Retrieved April 16 2021 a b c Seaspiracy 2021 Transcript Scraps from the loft March 30 2021 Archived from the original on April 10 2021 Retrieved March 31 2021 Well the latest study actually showed that 46 of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is fishing nets alone But perhaps one of the most shocking facts of all came from one of the world s leading fisheries experts estimating that if current fishing trends continue we will see virtually empty oceans by the year 2048 I couldn t believe what I was hearing The internationally recognized seafood label was a complete fabrication since it guaranteed nothing At this point I began to wonder what else was being covered up Seaspiracy 8 Major Takeaways From the New Netflix Doc Green Matters March 29 2021 Archived from the original on April 10 2021 Retrieved March 30 2021 Lebreton L Slat B Ferrari F Sainte Rose B Aitken J Marthouse R Hajbane S Cunsolo S Schwarz A Levivier A Noble K March 22 2018 Evidence that the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is rapidly accumulating plastic Scientific Reports 8 1 4666 Bibcode 2018NatSR 8 4666L doi 10 1038 s41598 018 22939 w ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5864935 PMID 29568057 Over three quarters of the GPGP mass was carried by debris larger than 5 cm and at least 46 was comprised of fishing nets a b Worm Boris 2006 Impacts of Biodiversity Loss on Ocean Ecosystem Services Science 314 5800 787 790 Bibcode 2006Sci 314 787W doi 10 1126 science 1132294 PMID 17082450 S2CID 37235806 Archived from the original on March 3 2024 Retrieved April 9 2021 Conclusions Positive relationships between diversity and ecosystem functions and services were found using experimental Fig 1 and correlative approaches along trajectories of diversity loss Figs 2 and 3 and recovery Fig 4 Our data highlight the societal consequences of an ongoing erosion of diversity that appears to be accelerating on a global scale Fig 3A This trend is of serious concern because it projects the global collapse of all taxa currently fished by the mid 21st century based on the extrapolation of regression in Fig 3A to 100 in the year 2048 nbsp Seaspiracy Facts Archived from the original on April 16 2021 Retrieved April 15 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Seaspiracy Official website Seaspiracy at Rotten Tomatoes Seaspiracy at IMDb nbsp Is Netflix s Seaspiracy film right about fishing damaging oceans BBC News Reality Check 2021 04 09 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 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