Seafood Traceability Practitioner’s Workshop Summary Report
https://www.stimson.org/2022/seafood-traceability-practitioners-report/
The Workshop participants raised numerous key ideas to remove barriers and improve seafood traceability, including:

The need for adopting standardized, secure electronic data through the seafood supply chain to facilitate reporting requirements and improve enforcement against IUU fish imports.

Increased interoperability of seafood data tracking systems across platforms as more market states adopt new traceability schemes, data requirements, and increase data collection.

Seafood traceability programs can be more effective with harmonized key data elements (KDEs) across different market state platforms, as well as common understanding of the KDE requirements for catch documentation and traceability.

The importance of electronic data systems to ensure the integrity and accurate verification of catch and traceability data.

Traceability systems should adopt electronic catch documentation and move away from paper-based systems, which can be easily falsified.

Innovative technologies to manage and analyze big data should be used in seafood traceability including blockchain, which can verify and store data in an online platform, should be sought to help organize and best make use of the large amounts of data collected.
data epcis gdst indonesia tracebility | permalink | 2025-01-17 11:55:38

EPCIS Examples
https://ref.gs1.org/docs/epcis/examples
XML and JSON
code epcis json | permalink | 2022-07-09 11:27:12

EPCIS 2.0 Standard, full text
https://ref.gs1.org/standards/epcis/


EPCIS Standard enables disparate applications to create and share visibility event data, both within and across enterprises. Release 2.0, Ratified, Jun 2022.
epcis specifications standard | permalink | 2022-07-09 10:48:15

EPCIS
https://www.gs1.org/standards/epcis
EPCIS is a GS1 standard that enables trading partners to share information about the physical movement and status of products as they travel throughout the supply chain – from business to business and ultimately to consumers. It helps answer the “what, where, when and why” questions to meet consumer and regulatory demands for accurate and detailed product information.

The goal of EPCIS is to enable disparate applications to create and share visibility event data, both within and across enterprises. This sharing is aimed at enabling users to gain a shared view of physical or digital objects within a relevant business context.
epcis gs1 standard traceability | permalink | 2022-05-26 23:06:52