Gulf Shores Studies Reveal Widespread Shrimp Mislabeling Despite Alabama Seafood Law
Gulf Shores Studies Reveal Widespread Shrimp Mislabeling Despite Alabama Seafood Law

Gulf Shores Studies Reveal Widespread Shrimp Mislabeling Despite Alabama Seafood Law

News summary

Since October 2024, Alabama has required restaurants and seafood retailers to disclose the country of origin for all seafood, aiming to ensure transparency for consumers. SeaD Consulting, commissioned by the Southern Shrimp Alliance, has conducted multiple rounds of genetic testing on shrimp served in Gulf Shores-area restaurants to verify whether shrimp labeled as local or wild-caught is truly domestic. Follow-up testing in October 2025 of 22 restaurants showed that 46% were still serving imported shrimp, a slight increase from 43% previously, with some restaurants switching from domestic to imported shrimp and vice versa. Despite some improvements, many establishments continue to mislabel imported shrimp as local, raising concerns about enforcement of Alabama’s seafood labeling law and consumer deception. The Southern Shrimp Alliance and SeaD Consulting highlight the economic and ethical implications, noting that much imported farm-raised shrimp is associated with questionable labor and environmental practices. Findings from these tests have been shared with the Alabama Department of Health to address ongoing challenges in seafood labeling compliance.

Story Coverage
Bias Distribution
100% Left
Information Sources
bfb2a97b-336e-48d9-b69a-147df7862dc2
Left 100%
Coverage Details
Total News Sources
1
Left
1
Center
0
Right
0
Unrated
0
Last Updated
3 days ago
Bias Distribution
100% Left
Related News
Daily Index

Negative

25Serious

Neutral

Optimistic

Positive

Ask VT AI
Story Coverage

Related Topics

Subscribe

Stay in the know

Get the latest news, exclusive insights, and curated content delivered straight to your inbox.

Present

Gift Subscriptions

The perfect gift for understanding
news from all angles.

Related News
Recommended News