[[{“value”:”
The evolution of Italian seafood consumption is now deeply intertwined with the transformation of modern retail. The Modern Distribution Forum 2025, hosted in Milan and organized by Federdistribuzione, offered a clear snapshot of how the relationship between citizens, retail stores and food products is changing. A broad scenario, certainly, but one that directly involves the seafood supply chain, increasingly shaped by value-driven choices, sustainability and new technologies.
Even without direct references to the seafood segment, the event delivered an important message: modern retail is not just the final link in the chain but the place where consumers decide what they are willing to choose, reward and stay loyal to. And in a country where most seafood purchases are made through large-scale distribution, every shift in retail becomes a strategic signal for the entire sector.
Italy buying less but buying better: an opportunity for seafood
The research presented by Censis outlined a precise horizon. Italians are moving cautiously in an economically uncertain environment but are choosing with growing awareness. Quality, origin and consistency between purchase and personal values carry increasing weight.
A new logic is emerging—one that penalizes impulsive choices and rewards what communicates trust, safety and integrity. For seafood, this translates into renewed interest in high-service processed products, in certifiable references across the supply chain, and in packaging that displays clear and credible information.
In a market where 83.9% of consumers prefer products aligned with their values and 75.5% orient buying decisions around sustainability, the seafood industry has the potential to secure an even stronger position—provided it presents itself with clear, verifiable standards.
Singles, seniors, micro-households: a country reshaping the shelves
Italy’s demographic shift is driving an equally significant transformation in food categories. The increase in single-person households, couples without children and an aging population pushes demand toward products requiring less time, less skill and less waste.
In the seafood sector, this is reflected in single portions, calibrated cuts, ready-to-cook recipes, refrigerated options and frozen products with controlled shelf-life. Processing companies able to combine practicality, food safety and quality could be the first to benefit from this scenario.
The physical store as a place of trust: a signal for fish counters
One of the most relevant insights from the Forum concerns the role of physical stores. Despite the rise of e-commerce and digital tools, Italians continue to view retail stores as spaces of relationship and reassurance.
Trained staff, clear product displays and the possibility of receiving advice are central to food choices. For seafood, this means that the assisted counter remains a strategic asset, where professionalism can determine the difference between a missed sale and a consolidated preference.
At the same time, self-service formats must evolve with more readable packaging, direct nutritional panels and instant traceability tools.
Technologies and AI reshaping value chains, logistics and decisions
The Forum highlighted technology as the engine of a systemic transformation. Retail companies are investing in artificial intelligence to forecast flows, optimize logistics and reduce errors in procurement planning.
For seafood—a naturally delicate category—the impact may be even more significant.
AI can become a decisive tool to:
-
ensure continuity in the cold chain
-
anticipate seasonal demand
-
reduce waste and returns
-
monitor quality and compliance
-
improve in-store exposure based on real data
In a sector where a logistical error can generate considerable costs, technology is no longer an option—it’s the new competitive infrastructure.
What the seafood industry must absorb from this Forum
The Modern Distribution Forum 2025 does not talk about seas, fleets or aquaculture, yet it speaks volumes about the context in which seafood reaches the final consumer. And that alone makes it a strategic event.
Three reflections emerge clearly:
Perceived value will outweigh quantity. The seafood sector must invest in certifiable content, transparency and tangible quality.
Sustainability is now mainstream. It guides the entire food shopping experience and includes buyers of processed or frozen seafood.
Technology will reshape the industry. From logistics to retailer–supplier relations, AI will be decisive in making the supply chain more efficient and competitive.
As 2026 approaches, the winners will not be the cheapest products but those most aligned with the needs of a society that wants to eat well, trust what it buys and find a verifiable story behind every item.
The Milan Forum offered a valuable lens for understanding where Italian consumers are heading—and what they will expect from the seafood products they bring to their tables. The seafood supply chain is now called to interpret this shift without delay: quality, service, sustainability and technology are no longer trends but the new rules of the game.
Stay ahead of change in the blue economy. Subscribe to our newsletter and get insights on sustainability, innovation, and market trends shaping the seafood sector.
L’articolo Italian Seafood Consumption and Modern Retail Trends 2025 proviene da Pesceinrete.
“}]]