| More
Home / Press Center / Press Releases


Posted On June 21, 2006
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


Mercury Testing Gives Fish a Clean Bill of Health

Study Of 142 Samples From The Washington, DC Area Finds Every Fish Is Safe To Eat

Washington -- Today the nonprofit Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF) released a report detailing the first comprehensive mercury testing of fish sold in the Washington, DC metropolitan area. The results are undeniably good for consumers.

Working with an independent laboratory, the Center tested 142 samples of canned tuna and fresh fish from 36 different retail stores in Washington, DC and the nearby Maryland and Virginia suburbs. Using published standards from the Food and Drug Administration as a guide, every fish sampled for this study is safe to eat.

The FDA has written that its mercury Action Level (1.0 part per million) was established "to limit consumers' methyl mercury exposure to levels 10 times lower than the lowest levels associated with adverse effects." Adjusting for this ten-fold safety factor, the highest mercury level measured in the Washington, DC region was 350 percent lower than what the FDA believes might represent a health risk for consumers.

"Guidelines from the FDA and EPA include safety margins of 1,000 percent. Consumers should have this information, but many environmental groups would rather scare Americans than educate them," said Center for Consumer Freedom Director of Research David Martosko. "Despite the recent fish tales about mercury, every specimen we tested is perfectly safe to eat. That’s not surprising, since the medical literature contains no American cases of mercury poisoning from fish consumption."

The CCF report, Safe Fish, also re-examined mercury levels reported in studies published by the Chicago Tribune and five environmental advocacy groups. Despite dire food-safety warnings from the reports' authors, absolutely none of them identified fish whose mercury levels represent a health concern. And tuna, which has been singled out for criticism by many of these groups, tested comparatively low in mercury.

In November, former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Louis Sullivan addressed the proliferation of mercury warnings in places where fish are sold, telling a California court that they "scare people away from a healthy food."

Fish sampled for CCF's study include canned light and albacore tuna, fresh yellowfin (ahi) tuna, swordfish, salmon, Chilean sea bass, and rockfish.

Learn more about mercury hype and try the Internet's only realistic mercury-fish calculator at www.MercuryFacts.com.

The Center for Consumer Freedom is a nonprofit coalition supported by restaurants, food companies, and consumers, working together to promote personal responsibility and protect consumer choices.

For media comment, contact our media department at 202-463-7112 ext. 115




printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list

Ad Campaigns

Brain Washed? Brain Washed?
The animal-rights nuts at the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine tried to scare Americans away from fish with a misleading ad in the Washington Post. Our rapid response made sure Post readers knew what the group was really up to… Don't let animal-rights activists brainwash you with fish stories. click to view »

Latest Study on Fish Latest Study on Fish
According to the latest study: you shouldn't eat fish click to view »


OpEds

Fishy Omega-3 risks
If the FDA's report becomes official policy, the conventional wisdom urging women of childbearing age to eat less fish will be turned completely upside-down. read more here »

Poor Children Suffer From Tuna Fears
Seafood warnings are hurting, not helping, America’s most vulnerable kids. Sad? Yes. Shameful? Absolutely. read more here »

Letters

No worries
UNLV environmental health professor Shawn Gerstenberger and his team are wrong to conclude that trace mercury levels in canned tuna warrant a warning label. read more here »

Mercury’s ill effects overstated
The well-documented health benefits of consuming fish far outweigh any hypothetical health risks. It's time that fish regained its old reputation as "brain food." read more here »

A fish story you shouldn't swallow
Consumers shouldn't be scared away from a diet rich in seafood, despite the scary headlines generated by a recent U.S. Geological Survey report. read more here »


Copyright © 1997-2010 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.