Paris, France | August 2025
The VeriFish project was showcased this week at the 23rd International Congress of Nutrition (IUNS-ICN 2025) in Paris, the world’s premier gathering for nutrition scientists, public health professionals, and food system stakeholders.

Siân Astley (EuroFIR, BE) presented VeriFish’s Sustainability Indicator Framework, focusing on one of its most innovative features: the integration of nutrient quality indicators to assess the role of seafood in healthy, sustainable diets.

Why ICN Matters for VeriFish
With thousands of experts from across the globe, ICN is a strategic venue for shaping future food and health policy. By presenting at ICN 2025, VeriFish ensures its scientific approach contributes directly to global debates on:
- Sustainable food systems
- Dietary guidelines
- Protein transitions
- Nutrition equity and food security
Seafood often remains underrepresented in such discussions, despite its clear nutritional benefits and growing relevance in climate-resilient diets.

Nutrient Quality: A New Lens for Seafood Sustainability
VeriFish’s framework evaluates seafood not only by environmental and socio-economic criteria, but also by its contribution to human nutrition. Through the nutrient quality pillar, the project applies robust metrics — including protein density, omega-3 content, and micronutrient profiles — enabling direct comparison with other protein sources.
This work, led by EuroFIR, offers a transparent, harmonised, and science-based method for valuing seafood within public health strategies, procurement standards, and dietary communications.

Shaping the Future of Sustainable Diets
Siân’s presentation at ICN 2025 helped position VeriFish at the intersection of sustainability and global nutrition policy. This contribution reinforces the project’s role in building a more integrated approach to how we assess, communicate, and promote seafood consumption.
By combining scientific evidence, practical tools, and stakeholder engagement, VeriFish supports a future where sustainable seafood is not just environmentally sound, but also nutritionally recognised and widely understood.