News

Humans may not be the only species that struggles to eat the right amounts of the ideal foods. A new study led by researchers ...
Honey produced by some species of Australian stingless bees possesses impressive bacteria- and fungi-killing properties, ...
The seafood industry has had its share of recalls. From Bumble Bee to Bornstein Seafoods, here's a list of some of the worst ...
U.S. canned tuna producer Bumble Bee Foods has asked a court to dismiss a lawsuit alleging that it knowingly benefited from its suppliers’ use of forced labor by Indonesian workers.
The lawsuit is going after the wrong party, says the 34-page filing. And if Bumble Bee were found liable, it said, so might every other company that sources product from foreign entities.
Bumble Bee Foods files for bankruptcy, plans to sell assets to Taiwan company for $925 million. Kelly Tyko. USA TODAY. One of the nation's best-known tuna brands has filed for bankruptcy.
In January 2020, FCF acquired Bumble Bee Foods for $928 million. This acquisition raised concerns about Bumble Bee’s supply chain, given FCF’s connections to vessels implicated in labor abuses.
The corporate office of Bumble Bee Foods in San Diego, California, on May 17, 2018. Mike Blake/Reuters. Human rights abuses in the fishing industry are well documented but accountability is rare.
Four Indonesian villagers who say they were subjected to physical abuse and forced labor while working as fishermen for San Diego-based Bumble Bee Foods sued the canned tuna company Wednesday in ...
Fishermen Accuse Bumble Bee Foods of Benefiting Off Their Forced Labor Instead, they worked for months on end for little to no pay, pulling up to 18-hour workdays in unsafe and violent work ...
Bumble Bee, which had a 41% U.S. market share for canned albacore when it filed for bankruptcy in 2019, is incorporated in Delaware and in 2020 was sold for nearly $1 billion to the Taiwanese ...
In a lawsuit filed in California, the plaintiffs said that Bumble Bee Foods was aware of and benefited from abuse by suppliers. The company declined to comment. By Sui-Lee Wee and Muktita ...