UN-Backed Nuclear Science Takes Aim at Global Seafood Fraud

A UN-backed project is using nuclear technology to detect and prevent global seafood fraud, protecting consumers, fisherfolk, and sustainable supply chains.

Seafood fraud is emerging as one of the most pressing challenges for consumers, fishers, and regulators worldwide. From mislabeled species to hidden additives, deceptive practices are eroding public trust and threatening millions of livelihoods.

In a new five-year coordinated research project, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and FAO are deploying nuclear techniques to combat seafood fraud.
The initiative was launched through the Joint FAO/IAEA Centre of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture. It aims to build scientific capacity. The initiative ensures product authenticity. It also boosts transparency across seafood markets.

Seafood consumption has doubled since the 1960s. It is projected to double again by 2050. This makes integrity in the supply chain critical. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates the fisheries and aquaculture sector employs 62 million people directly. Additionally, 600 million livelihoods globally depend on it.

Seafood fraud can involve substituting premium fish with cheaper species or using undeclared additives. Such deception can occur at any stage of the supply chain, particularly as modern distribution networks become longer and more complex.

Nuclear Technology Joins the Fight

 “This IAEA project provides Member States with a valuable opportunity to collaborate in combating fraud and de-risking the seafood supply chain using robust nuclear science-based tools,” said Debashish Mazumder from the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organization.

Detecting Fraud with Atoms

The IAEA’s Food Safety and Control Laboratory offers participating countries the tools to identify, trace, and verify seafood origins. One key method is stable isotope ratio analysis, which examines elements such as oxygen in fish tissue to determine geographical origin and verify whether the fish was wild-caught or farm-raised.

By reflecting environmental and ecological conditions within the fish’s body, this nuclear-based technique helps detect substitutions and mislabeling with high accuracy.

Protecting Consumers and Fisherfolk

The integration of nuclear science into seafood monitoring will:

  • Enhance consumer protection by ensuring buyers get exactly what they pay for.
  • Support small-scale fishers whose livelihoods depend on transparent and fair markets.
  • Strengthen national and international food control systems to respond rapidly to fraud threats.
  • Encourage sustainable aquatic resource management by increasing accountability.


By merging nuclear science with food safety policy, the UN-backed project could transform global seafood traceability. It could also safeguard public health and protect honest fishers in a rapidly expanding market.

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