Squid is disappearing from our tables
Homemade ojinggeo-bokkeum (spicy stir-fried squid), ojingeo-hoe (sliced raw squid) by the sea, ojingeo sundae (stuffed squid) and fritters at our favorite local markets.

Petition
Our squid is disappearing. Only a transparent distribution system can protect our dinner tables.
Homemade ojinggeo-bokkeum (spicy stir-fried squid), ojingeo-hoe (sliced raw squid) by the sea, ojingeo sundae (stuffed squid) and fritters at our favorite local markets.
These familiar tastes may soon exist only as memories.
Before it’s too late, help us protect our seas—and our tables. If we don’t act now, our squid will not return.
Most of the squid on Korean plates is imported, with no clear record of where or how it was caught. This lack of transparency leads to the following critical issues:
Korean consumers have the right to know that the seafood they purchase is legal, safe, and responsibly sourced.
– A fisherman on a Chinese deep-sea squid fishing vessel (EJF interview, 2025)
A vessel that never comes to port is a vessel that answers to no one. No inspections. No verification.
For all those months at sea, moving from one fishing ground to the next — there is no way for consumers to know where that squid has been, or whether it was legally caught in the first place.
And yet squid with no traceable origin is landing on our dinner tables every single day, as if this were perfectly normal.
Strengthen traceability standards for imported squid Establish a transparent system that allows consumers to verify exactly where and how every squid on their table was caught. These standards already apply to other seafood. Squid should be no exception.
Eliminate the circulation of illegally caught seafood Ensure that only legally and responsibly caught squid can enter the Korean domestic market through strict verification.
Guarantee transparent information for consumers Establish legal standards requiring imported seafood packaging to clearly show country of origin, catch method, and distribution history.
It begins with a question: where did the squid I’m buying at the market today actually come from, and why has it become so expensive?
Sign now. Your voice changes policy.