Chicken of the Sea International is committed to leading the industry with safe, wholesome, nutritious and delicious products, including its well-known and extensive tuna product line and more than a dozen varieties of high-quality fish and shellfish.
One of the most famous and recognizable tuna brands in the US is Chicken of the Sea. Its mermaid logo has been on tuna cans since the 1950s. But who owns this well-known tuna company now?
A Brief History of Chicken of the Sea
Chicken of the Sea has been around for more than 100 years and has a long and interesting history. The business began in San Pedro, California, in 1914 under the name Van Camp Seafood Company. In the 1930s, stores first sold tuna products with the Chicken of the Sea brand.
Chicken of the Sea adopted its memorable brand name and mermaid mascot in the 1950s. According to company history the name “Chicken of the Sea” was inspired by fishermen who thought white albacore tuna had a mild flavor and light meat similar to chicken.
Over the decades, the Van Camp Seafood Company changed hands several times. Here’s a quick look at the different owners:
- 1963 – Van Camp Seafood Company acquired by Ralston Purina
- 1988 – Ralston Purina sells Van Camp division to Indonesian company PT Mantrust
- 1997 – Investment group Tri-Union Seafoods LLC purchases the company
- 2000 – Thai Union International buys out Tri-Union to become sole owner
This brings us to the current ownership of Chicken of the Sea today.
Chicken of the Sea is Now Owned by Thai Union Group
Chicken of the Sea has been owned by the Thai Union Group, which is based in Samut Sakhon, Thailand, since 2000.
The Thai Union Group is one of the largest seafood companies in the world. They are the number one producer of canned tuna globally. In addition to canned tuna, Thai Union produces other canned seafood like salmon, sardines, mackerel, oysters, crab, and more.
Some key facts about the Thai Union Group:
- Thai conglomerate founded in 1988
- Employs over 44,000 people worldwide
- Operates in over 74 countries
- Owns popular seafood brands like Chicken of the Sea, John West, Petit Navire, Mareblu, and more
Chicken of the Sea helped expand Thai Union’s reach into the lucrative US market for canned and pouched tuna. It remains Thai Union’s number one brand in the United States.
Controversy Around Chicken of the Sea’s Parent Company
While Thai Union Group is a seafood powerhouse, they have faced some controversy over sustainability and human rights issues.
In 2015, a report from the Associated Press uncovered slave-like conditions, abuse, and illegal fishing practices on Thai Union fishing vessels. The report alleged some workers were kept at sea for years at a time.
Thai Union has been criticized by Greenpeace for not offering sustainably-sourced canned tuna to US customers. They have asked the company to improve how they fish, how they treat workers, and how they keep track of their catch.
In response, Thai Union has pledged to improve fisheries sustainability and work towards more ethical and environmentally-sound practices. However, critics say the company needs to take more concrete action to fulfill these promises.
What Does Chicken of the Sea Ownership Mean for Consumers?
For tuna lovers, the Thai Union Group ownership of Chicken of the Sea introduces some ethical considerations. Consumers need to weigh factors like sustainability, fishing methods, and worker rights when choosing tuna brands.
Chicken of the Sea does offer some sustainable options like pole and line caught skipjack tuna. However, Greenpeace’s tuna shopping guide gave the brand an overall “red” rating for not meeting sustainability criteria.
Conscious consumers may want to look for the MSC blue fish ecolabel or the Earth Island “dolphin-safe” logo when buying tuna. Choosing skipjack light tuna has a lower environmental impact than albacore white tuna.
Writing letters and tweets to Chicken of the Sea urging them to offer more ethical tuna could help influence the company’s policies. Voting with your wallet also sends a powerful message to brands about what consumers expect.
Chicken of the Sea Remains an Iconic American Brand
The iconic mermaid swimming on every can makes Chicken of the Sea a nostalgic brand for many Americans. Since 1914, it has been a staple item in pantries and tuna salad sandwiches across the country.
But it’s important for consumers to look behind the branding. The Thai Union Group now steers the future of this classic tuna company. Progress still needs to be made to fully align Chicken of the Sea’s practices with consumer values around sustainability and social responsibility.
So next time you reach for a can of Chicken of the Sea tuna, consider who owns this classic brand today. With public awareness and pressure, companies like Thai Union can continue improving their supply chains. This gives us hope that the future can be bright for workers, oceans, and tuna lovers alike.
History of Chicken of the Sea International
Chicken of the Sea International is one of the leading canned seafood companies in the world and one of the largest in the United States. The company specializes in tuna products, but also markets more than a dozen varieties of high-quality fish and shellfish products. By 1998, tuna was the largest per capita consumption of all seafood products. Some of the companys product lines have included: Dolphin-safe and kosher-certified albacore tuna products like Solid White Albacore Packed in Spring Water; Chunk White Albacore Packed in Spring Water; Solid White Albacore Packed in Saturated Fat-Free Canola Oil; Very Low Sodium Albacore; and Low Sodium Albacore. Some examples of light meat tuna products come from prime skipjack and yellowfin tuna. These include Chunk Light in Spring Water, Chunk Light Tuna in Saturated Fat-Free Canola Oil, Solid Light in Olive Oil, Low Sodium Yellowfin Packed in Spring Water, and Chunk Light with Added Vegetable Broth. Traditional Red Salmon and Traditional Pink Salmon; Skinless/Boneless Pink Salmon; crabmeat in different types of white, fancy, and lump; mackerel; oval and tall sardines in different sauces and spring water; clams in minced, chopped, or whole forms; and oysters in boiled and smoked-pack forms.
Out of the Blue: History, 1914-75
Van Camp Seafood Company, Inc. was founded back in the spring of 1914 when Frank Van Camp and his son, Gilbert, bought the California Tunny Canning Company to can albacore. Three years later, Van Camp Seafood Company became the first cannery to commercially pack yellowfin tuna. In the 1930s, Van Camp acquired its first two fishing vessels.
In the late 1950s, the company made the famous commercial jingle, “Ask any mermaid you see, who’s the best tuna? Chicken of the Sea.” This made the company famous all over the world. The company also made the mermaid its mascot at the same time. She is still a famous figure in the food industry, along with The Pillsbury Doughboy, The Green Giant, and Charlie Tuna, her coworker.
In 1963, the company was sold to Missouri-based Ralston Purina, known primarily as a producer of processed foods, pet food, and livestock and poultry feeds. Ralston Purina built a cannery in San Diego, California, in 1975, following the closing of a plant in Los Angeles County.
During the three decades following World War II, southern California (including San Diego, Terminal Island, and Long Beach) became the world center for tuna, albacore, and bluefin processing and canning. By 1975, with The U.S. Tuna Foundation, Van Camp Seafood Co., Bumble Bee Seafoods, Pan Pacific Fisheries, and Mitsubishi Foods, among others, maintaining as many as 16 bustling canneries, employing more than 10,000 workers ranging from fishermen and cannery workers to administrators and dock workers, tuna sandwiches, tuna salads, and tuna casseroles became commonplace. By 1994, the number of industry workers in southern California had dropped to a mere 500. By 1976, the company was operating canneries in San Diego and Terminal Island, California, American Samoa (in the South Pacific), and Ponce, Puerto Rico.
Tuna is processed through a number of steps. First, fresh-caught tuna is frozen on the boat in brine at temperatures as low as 10 degrees Fahrenheit. Once at the cannery, the frozen tuna is thawed, which takes an hour or two. Next, it is butchered and gutted to remove the entrails. The gutted parts are ground up and used to make organic fertilizer. The butchered fish is steam cooked and then cooled. In the packing room, it is deboned. The head, tail, and fins are removed, as are its bones. The skin and red meat are also removed. The red meat is used to manufacture pet food, while the bony parts are ground up to make fish meal animal feed and fertilizer. What remains is a loin, or large, dressed piece of tuna, and flakes of tuna that have come off in the cleaning process. They are packed by an automatic filling machine into cans. The loin portions are used to pack chunk, or solid, tuna, while the flakes are used for lower grades of canned tuna. Salt and water or oil are added to the can. The can is sealed with lids in a vacuum process, then washed. The tuna is pasteurized and the can is heated with steam to kill bacteria, giving the can a shelf life of about five years. Finally, the cooled can is labeled and shipped.
A Fishy Situation: Fleeing from the West Coast, 1980s
In 1984, Ralston Purina gutted Van Camps San Diego facilities, closing the cannery facility and moving it to the distant shores of American Samoa, in order to access the more inexpensive labor pool, and also to be closer to one of the richest fishing grounds in the world. Ralston Purina also moved Van Camps main offices to St. Louis, Missouri.
It was only the beginning of a time of shake-up for the industry as, the following year, San Francisco-based Castle & Cooke Inc. sold its Bumble Bee Seafoods salmon and tuna cannery operations on Harbor Drive in San Diego to the divisions four top managers for $73 million. Bumble Bee, one of Van Camp Seafoods primary competitors, eventually found its way into Thai hands, and reported revenues of $450 million in 1997 and, by then, maintained processing plants in Thailand, Puerto Rico, and Ecuador, as well as returning to southern California, with another facility in the city of Santa Fe Springs (which originally was a Bumble Bee facility owned by Unicord of Thailand).
In 1988, a group of private investors from Indonesia, called P. T. Mantrust Corporation, purchased Van Camps from Ralston Purina in a highly leveraged transaction. The new owners planned to leverage their fishing fleet and expanded canning operation in Indonesia with Van Camps American Samoa cannery and brand name to execute a fully integrated approach to supplying canned tuna to the United States. But, due to high interest rates in Indonesia, and its overly leveraged structure, P. T. Mantrust experienced cash flow difficulties and the primary creditor, The Prudential Life Insurance Company of America, became the majority owner.
Boycott for Dolphins, Early 1990s
In April 1990, the tuna industry was faced with a growing consumer boycott of canned tuna products when the public was made aware that over 100,000 dolphins died per year when they were caught by purse-seine methods, in which fishermen cast a large net around a school of tuna and then pull it taut like the drawstring of a purse. In response, the three largest sellers of canned tuna in the United States made a decision that they would no longer sell tuna caught by methods harmful to dolphins. Star-Kist Seafood, the worlds largest tuna canner at the time, owned by food giant H. J. Heinz, led the way, followed by the two other major canners, Bumble Bee Seafoods and Van Camp Seafood.
In October of that year, Van Camp Seafood Co. moved its corporate headquarters and 115-member staff from St. Louis back to its home city of San Diego, into a 33,362-square-foot building in Chancellor Park, an office complex located in an area known as “The Golden Triangle.”
Two years later, in December 1992, much of the companys senior hierarchy moved up. Dennis Mussell, who formerly worked for companies such as Ocean Garden Products and Mitsubishi Foods, was promoted to chief operating officer; J. Douglas Hines was promoted to senior vice-president of sales and marketing; and Don George was made senior vice-president for the newly formed logistics department.
In the summer of 1995, Pan Pacific Fisheries filed for bankruptcy, leaving more than $15 million in debts and nearly 700 people without jobs. The desperate move also meant the closing of the last full-service tuna processing plant in the continental United States, as it shut down operations at the last canning facility on Terminal Island. By this time, Star-Kist had moved their headquarters from its southern California location in Long Beach to distant Pennsylvania.
In 1996, consumer research group Leo J. Shapiro & Associates listed the Chicken of the Sea brand name as one of the top 10 consumer packaged goods in the United States.
Early that same year, Tri-Marine International Inc. of San Pedro, California, bought the half-century-old former Pan Pacific Fisheries plant on Cannery Street on Terminal Island, for $7.3 million, spending another $5 million to renovate the 10-acre complex and renaming the cannery Tri-Union Seafoods LLC. The facility was reopened in June of that year, and Tri-Union rehired nearly 300 of the old Pan Pacific workers, and another 400 workers were hired a few months later when the renovations were completed. A canning facility in the United States was back in business again. Thailands Unicord also sold the Bumble Bee product line back to a group of U.S. investors and the canning facilities of Bumble Bee to Star-Kist. Meanwhile, total annual revenue for Van Camp in 1996 reached $440 million.
In October 1997, in a $97 million deal, Van Camp Seafood was saved from Chapter 11 bankruptcy as Tri-Union Seafoods LLC purchased the venerable canned seafood company, the third time it changed hands in its long history.
Tri-Union Seafoods LLC by that time was a conglomeration of several companies located throughout the world. The first, Bangkok-based Thai Union International Inc. [also known as Thai Union Frozen Products Public Co. Ltd., itself made up of Thai Union Frozen Products PCL, Songkla Canning PCL, and Thai Union Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (established in 1977)] was, at the time, the largest tuna packer in Asia and second largest in the world, with total annual sales exceeding $500 million in 1996, and 10,000 employees worldwide, producing over 600 metric tons of canned tuna, pouched tuna, frozen tuna loin, frozen shrimp, canned pet food, canned seafood, and canned salmon per day. The second, Tri-Marine International Inc., was one of the largest tuna traders in the world, with offices and subsidiaries in Europe, Japan, Singapore, the Solomon Islands, Taiwan, Thailand, South America, and the United States. Established in 1972, it had 1996 sales of $342 million on over 300,000 tons of products per year, including raw tuna, swordfish, salmon, shrimp, and squid. And the third was Ed Gann, a Rancho Santa Fe, California resident with more than 40 years experience in the fishing industry, and one of the worlds most respected purse-seine tuna boat operators and owner of a company called Caribbean Marine, whose fleet consisted at the time of five fishing vessels with a total holding capacity of nearly 6,500 tons, producing an annual catch of nearly 40,000 tons of dolphin-safe tuna distributed to the United States, Central America, South America, Puerto Rico, and Europe. He had, at that point in his career, operated or owned more than 50 fishing vessels (Van Camp Seafood itself already contracted nine vessels).
Tri-Union Seafoods changed the name of Van Camp Seafood Co. Inc. to Chicken of the Sea International, adopting its brand name for the company, to help avoid confusion with Van de Kamps Inc., located in St. Louis, best-known for their pork and beans, but who also manufactured a line of frozen breaded fish sticks. Chicken of the Sea International, under the direction of its new leadership, began aggressive marketing of its Chicken of the Sea family of products in retail, food service, and club stores. The new owners also left the Chicken of the Sea International main offices, and the staff of 2,200 people, located in San Diego.
Around the same time, Bumble Bee Seafoods Inc., yet another of the canned seafood companies which also had filed for Chapter 11, was acquired by International Home Foods Inc. for $163 million in cash and stock.
Also in 1997, Chicken of the Sea International launched its web site to respond to consumer inquiries about dolphin-safe tuna, overfished species, and requests for tuna recipes as well as allowing vendors to place orders via the site. The company also began a program attempting to increase sales of its non-tuna canned products such as shrimp, crab, clams, oysters, and sardines, since nearly 80 percent of the companys business was canned tuna. Total revenue for the company in 1997 reached $297 million.
By 1998, the company was the Port of San Diegos largest container customer, importing more than 700,000 cases of canned-food products monthly, sorted at Chicken of the Seas 100,000-square-foot central warehouse facility at the 10th Avenue Marine Terminal, and the companys main markets were the United States and Israel, but it was looking to the Pacific Rim for expansion. At the same time, the tuna industry as a whole was searching for a “Got Milk?” type of campaign to help promote all tuna products.
Early that year, Chicken of the Sea International and Tri-Union International LLC merged into one company, still called Chicken of the Sea International. The company, which by this time operated canneries located in American Samoa and San Pedro, California, added additional processing capacity, allowing Chicken of the Sea to be a significant strategic partner by offering private label brands to selected customers, offering complete canned seafood selections (both branded and private label) to the retail, foodservice, club store, mass merchandiser, and the pharmaceutical trade customers, as well as a high grade, gourmet quality canned catfood for U.S. and export markets. As the 20th century drew to a close, Chicken of the Sea was running strong in the industry again.
- Private Company
- Founded: 1914 as Van Camp Seafood Company, Inc.
- Employees: 2,900
- Sales: $297 million (1997 est.)
- SICs: 2091 Canned & Cured Fish & Seafoods
Chicken of the Sea’s Sardines, a Review
FAQ
Who owns the Chicken of the Sea brand?
The Thai Union Group owns Chicken of the Sea in Samut Sakhon, Thailand. It brings seafood to people and packages it. The brand is attached to tuna, salmon, clams, crab, shrimp, mackerel, oysters, kippers and sardines in cans, pouches and cups, as are its sister brands, Genova and Ace of Diamonds.
Who is the CEO of Chicken of the Sea?
9 Team Members
Chicken of The Sea’s current Chief Executive Officer, President is Bryan Rosenberg.
Is Chicken of the Sea Chinese?
Thai Union North America, which is the North American branch of Thai Union Group Public Company Limited, has a brand called Chicken of the Sea that people buy. The global entity, Thai Union, is the #1 ranked global food products company on the 2019 Dow Jones Sustainability Index.
Are StarKist and Chicken of the Sea the same company?
StarKist was owned by a South Korean conglomerate in 2015, Chicken of the Sea was owned by a Thai company, and Bumble Bee was owned by a British private equity firm. In that year, one of the “big three” tried to buy another. This is when things really went bad.
What happened to chicken of the sea international?
Chicken of the Sea International and Tri-Union International LLC merged into one company, still called Chicken of the Sea International. With the 2003 acquisition of Empress International, an importer of frozen shrimp and other shellfish, Chicken of the Sea’s total annual sales climbed to US$600 million.
Who makes chicken of the sea?
Chicken of the Sea is a packager and provider of seafood, owned by the Thai Union Group in Samut Sakhon, Thailand. The brand is attached to tuna, salmon, clams, crab, shrimp, mackerel, oysters, kippers and sardines in cans, pouches and cups, as are its sister brands, Genova and Ace of Diamonds.
Who owns Chicken of the sea frozen foods?
2006 Established Chicken of the Sea Frozen Foods to market frozen seafood in the USA. Chicken of the Sea Frozen Foods later merged with Empress International and was renamed Tri-Union Frozen Products, Inc. 2006 Acquired majority stake in PT Jui Fa International Food, a canned tuna producer and exporter based in Indonesia.
Is chicken of the sea a good brand?
of the Sea is a trusted brand. The first Chicken of the Sea bran ed products launched in 1930. Not surprisingly, brand awareness a ong consumers now sits at 97%. The iconic brand’s scale, reputation, and quality standards mean that you can count on Chicken of the Sea for shelf-stable
Does chicken of the sea frozen foods sell lobster?
Completed acquisition of Orion Seafood International, USA-based leading global supplier of lobsters, by Chicken of the Sea Frozen Foods, a Thai Union subsidiary. This M&A makes Chicken of the Sea Frozen Foods a leading player in lobster, bolstering its shrimp and crab businesses.
Does chicken of the sea sell canned tuna?
The company, which does business as Chicken of the Sea International, makes and markets some of the top brands of canned tuna in the US. Tri-Union cans tuna (Albacore and light), salmon, crab, shrimp, oysters, clams, sardines, and mackerel for sale in North America.