The Charity Can · Kerim Demirkol
Borlaug Scholar · Field Notes II

The Charity Can:
How Mega Sardines Was Crowned a “Superfood” While the Filipino Poor Got Sicker

In June 2025 a private US wellness body declared a Filipino canned-fish brand a “superfood.” By January 2026, The Manila Times had filed it under “Filipino Champions.” This Field Note is about what that label is actually doing — and who pays the cost.

My Borlaug Scholar argument is that the world’s most important hunger problems are no longer about empty calories. They are about the wrong calories — ultra-processed, shelf-stable, aggressively marketed industrial foods sold to populations who cannot afford to be misled about what they are eating. I first laid out this hunger-obesity paradox in an earlier essay. Field Note I mapped how a similar canned-sardine product class is sold three different ways to American consumers. This Field Note zooms in on the Philippines and on a single campaign that demonstrates exactly how the same paradox is being manufactured and sold to a poorer audience.

In June 2025, and again in escalated form in January 2026, Mega Prime Foods, Inc. ran an advertising campaign that, more clearly than any single case I have studied this year, demonstrates why this argument matters.

Correction of scope

This Field Note does not argue that sardines are unhealthy. It argues that the marketing premium and the national-pride framing layered onto Mega Sardines are not matched by what the back of the can shows. Sardines are real food, namely a small oily fish with a documented nutrient profile, omega-3 content, and a centuries-old tradition of being canned by hand in Portugal and Spain. The critique is of the unsupported “superfood” framing and the public-health concerns that framing does not weigh — not of canned fish as a food.

The fix is not to ban canned sardines. The fix is to refuse to call them what they are not, and to name who profits when they are mislabeled.

A note on evidence before you read further

This essay distinguishes carefully between verified official statistics (PSA fisheries production, DOST-FNRI National Nutrition Survey results, USDA food-security reporting, peer-reviewed journal findings) and commercial market estimates (private market-research projections). Government statistics are cited as such. Commercial estimates are explicitly labeled as illustrative. Where peer-reviewed studies report associations rather than causation, the language reflects that — “associated with” rather than “caused.” Where I include a hypothetical dietary scenario, it is labeled as hypothetical.

The corporate critique in this essay rests on what is publicly verifiable about the campaign itself, not on numbers I cannot defend. Where the data does not support a strong claim, I have softened the claim. Where it does, I have stated it directly.

Section IA Texas Certificate on a Filipino Tin Can

Mega Prime announced that Mega Sardines, the leading canned-sardine brand in the Philippines, had been officially endorsed as a “superfood” by the US-based Medical Wellness Association — a private trade body headquartered in Texas. By January 2026, the same Medical Wellness Association had declared “The International Year of the Sardines,” with Mega Prime Foods “appointed to bring the message across continents” (Mauricio-Arriola, The Manila Times, 25 January 2026).

The Manila Times filed the announcement under a section literally titled “Filipino Champions.” The accompanying photograph showed a Medical Wellness Association board member alongside Mega Prime Foods executives. The framing was corporate-celebratory — a private-corporation marketing victory presented as a moment of national pride.

Looked at honestly through a Borlaug Scholar lens, this is not nutritional progress. It is one of the clearest examples of corporate health-washing in modern Southeast Asian advertising — escalated, in 2026, into a coordinated international PR campaign — and it is being aimed at the population least equipped to push back.

The audience this campaign actually reaches
57.1%
Adults 20–59 overweight or obese (2023 NNS)
39.8%
Adult obesity prevalence (2023 NNS)
65.9%
Adults overweight or obese in NCR (2023 NNS regional)
31.4%
Households with moderate-to-severe food insecurity (2023 NNS, FIES)
23.6%
Children under five who are stunted (2023 NNS)
~37%
Estimated adult hypertension prevalence (Philippine PNNS, est.)
Sources · DOST-FNRI 2025 National Nutrition Summit, presenting 2023 National Nutrition Survey results · 2023 NNS regional breakdown via Rappler reporting · Lancet PURE Study (Mente et al., 2018). The hypertension prevalence figure (~37%) is an estimate based on prior Philippine National Nutrition Survey reporting; the 2023 NNS hypertension chapter is still being released. For a deeper-dive evaluation, see the companion student paper: Evaluating Cultural Analysis: Obesity in the Philippines (Grade 11 critical analysis / evidence evaluation, not a peer-reviewed medical article).
Chart 1

Philippine Fisheries Production, 2015–2025 (10-year window)

A pre-pandemic baseline tells a clearer story: the decline began before COVID, deepened after it, and has not recovered.

4.7M 4.5M 4.3M 4.1M 3.9M METRIC TONS (MILLIONS) 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 4.65 ~4.31* 4.42 4.40 4.34 4.06 3.96 COVID ONSET

Sources · Philippine Statistics Authority Fisheries Situation Reports 2015–2025, PSA OpenSTAT portal · Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources Philippine Fisheries Profile 2022 and 2024 · SEAFDEC Fisheries Country Profile: Philippines 2025. *2017 figure estimated; interpolated from 2016 and 2018 PSA values. Production figures in million metric tons, all sectors (commercial, municipal, aquaculture).

The reading (10-year window): Production fell about 15% (PSA — verified). The decline was already underway before COVID. 2019’s 4.42M MT remains the highest year in the panel, and the trajectory has not recovered. The Mega Sardines “superfood” campaign and the 2026 “International Year of the Sardines” both arrive at the end of a decade-long supply decline, not at the beginning of stability.

Section IIThe Three Actors in This Story

This essay is going to keep one distinction in plain view: the corporations are the agents of this story. The poor are the targets.

The price-sensitive Filipino family, for whom a PHP 25–35 can of sardines plus rice is the day’s meal three times a day. The ayuda recipient opening a relief box after a typhoon. The Filipino-American mother stocking her diaspora pantry in Doha, Dubai, or Los Angeles. None of these consumers asked the Medical Wellness Association of Texas for a verdict on what they should eat. None of them control whether their barangay’s relief truck shows up with canned protein or fresh produce. None of them set the marketing budget that placed Mega Sardines in The Manila Times under the headline “Filipino Champions.”

The corporations did. Naming them is the work of a Borlaug Scholar, the way Borlaug himself named the actors who fought him on agricultural reform.

The Three Actors Named in This Campaign
Mega Prime Foods, Inc.
A Filipino corporation that markets Mega Sardines. Promoted the brand as the “world’s first superfood sardines” in June 2025 and as the “International Year of the Sardines” lead brand in January 2026.
Medical Wellness Association
A private US wellness trade body headquartered in Texas. Not a regulator. Not a peer-reviewed scientific society. Not the FDA. Issued the “superfood” certificate that adorns the Mega Sardines tin.
“Filipino Champions” framing
The Manila Times Sunday section that placed the campaign under a national-pride banner — visually and editorially equating a private corporate marketing partnership with an international diplomatic appointment.

The cultural target of the campaign is the Filipino poor. The financial beneficiary is the Filipino corporate elite. The American private-wellness economy supplied the certificate that connected the two. All three of those facts deserve to be named in the same sentence.

Section III“Superfood” Is Not a Scientific Term

The word superfood has no formal regulatory or scientific definition. It does not appear as a defined nutritional category in US FDA labeling rules, EU nutritional regulations, the Philippine FDA framework, the WHO/FAO Codex Alimentarius, or in standard peer-reviewed nutrition classifications such as Monteiro et al.’s NOVA system (Public Health Nutrition, 2018). It is a marketing word, popularized in the 2000s American wellness boom to sell blueberries and kale to upper-middle-class American consumers. It now sells canned fish to the Filipino working poor. That migration is the entire late-stage globalized advertising story compressed into a single label.

Sardines are real food. The peer-reviewed nutrient profile, drawing on the USDA FoodData Central database, says so honestly: per 100g, drained Atlantic sardines provide 25g of protein, 38% of the calcium RDA, vitamin D, B12, and roughly 2g of omega-3 fatty acids — alongside 307 mg of sodium and 142 mg of cholesterol (Souza et al., Frontiers in Nutrition, 2023). A standard 155g Filipino canned sardine in tomato sauce typically lists approximately 360–420 mg sodium per can on Open Food Facts label data. The American Heart Association recommends two fatty-fish servings per week.

When canned sardines are eaten alongside other processed foods common in low-income Filipino diets — instant noodles (typically 700–1,200 mg sodium per pack), soy sauce, MSG-based seasonings, and processed meats — daily sodium intake can easily exceed the WHO 2,000 mg/day limit. The Lancet PURE study found that sodium intake above 5g/day was associated with increased cardiovascular events, with stronger blood-pressure responses in some Asian populations than in Western ones (Mente et al., 2018).

The 2024 BMJ umbrella review of 45 meta-analyses involving nearly 10 million participants found associations between higher ultra-processed food consumption and 32 adverse health outcomes, including a roughly 50% higher risk of cardiovascular disease–related death. (Observational evidence — associations, not proven causation.) — Lane et al., BMJ, 2024, n = 9,888,373
Chart 3

Sodium Per Serving — Sardine Brands Compared

“Healthy” premium sardines and Filipino charity sardines are not as far apart as the price tag suggests.

0 100 200 300 400 mg / serving Wild Planet No Salt Added (in water, $4.99/can) 70 mg Wild Planet Wild Sardines (EVOO, ~$3.99/can) 220 mg Fishwife “luxury” (preserved lemon, $9–14/can) ~345 mg Mega Sardines (“superfood” — PHP 25–35/can) ~390 mg Filipino brand average (Mega / Ligo / 555 / Young’s Town) ~420 mg Daily WHO limit: 2,000 mg. Hypothetical illustration: 5 cans of typical Filipino canned sardines per day would deliver approximately the entire WHO sodium limit , before rice, soy sauce, or other foods.

Important methodology note: Serving sizes differ across brands and the figures in this chart are not directly comparable on a per-can basis. Wild Planet products list sodium per 85g (3 oz) drained serving. Fishwife products list per single tin (~106g). Mega Sardines product labels (Open Food Facts) list per 155g can. The “Filipino brand average” bar is an illustrative estimate compiled by the author from Open Food Facts label data across major Philippine brands; it is not an audited industry average. Sources · Wild Planet Foods Inc. nutrition labels · Fishwife Tinned Seafood Co. label captured by EWG Food Scores (Jul 2024) · Mega Sardines Tomato Sauce 155g (Open Food Facts product 4806504710119; per-can ranges typically 360–420 mg across variants).

The reading (with appropriate caution): Even accounting for serving-size differences, the “premium luxury” pricing of Wild Planet and Fishwife is not primarily a low-sodium proposition. Wild Planet’s standard sardines and Fishwife’s preserved-lemon sardines sit in a similar sodium range to Mega Sardines on a per-serving basis. Wild Planet’s actual low-sodium product, the No Salt Added variety (~70 mg per 85g serving), is sold without a luxury markup. The price premium and the sodium reduction appear to be unrelated.

Mega Prime Foods, Inc., a corporation with the marketing budget to commission its own research, has not commissioned its own randomized controlled trial. It has obtained a private wellness-trade-body certificate. The choice between those two instruments is a choice. The certificate was cheaper. Its persuasive power on Filipino consumers operates inside what the peer-reviewed psychology literature has named colonial mentality (David & Okazaki, 2006), namely a documented preference for foreign-credentialed signals over domestic ones.

Section IVThe Same Country’s Border Detains the Same Food

Here is the contradiction at the heart of this campaign that no “Filipino Champions” feature will print:

The same canned products the US government detains at its border as adulterated, misbranded, or insufficiently processed are the products the Philippine government distributes to its own poorest citizens through ayuda relief packs and school feeding programs.

The US FDA maintains Import Alert 16-13 authorizing border officials to detain all anchovy and bagoong products from the Philippines without physical examination, citing histories of insect and rodent filth and E. coli contamination. Import Alert 99-36 detains low-acid canned foods from manufacturers who cannot file adequate scheduled processing safety documentation — the kind of safety review that prevents botulism. In July 2024, the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service issued a public health alert for Argentina-brand corned beef illegally imported from the Philippines into nine US states.

Mega Sardines as a brand is not on these specific alerts; its US export operations meet US standards. But the broader category — Filipino canned and processed seafood and meats — is monitored as a public health risk by the US FDA, and has been for decades. The Filipino food system, simultaneously, treats it as a national charity staple — and now, as of 2026, as a global “International Year” campaign. The same regulatory body whose country’s wellness-trade-body certificate adorns the Mega Sardines tin treats the broader product class as a border-control problem.

The contradiction goes one layer deeper than border alerts. It also lives in the nutrition-label thresholds themselves — the lines drawn by regulators to tell consumers what counts as “high in sodium.”

Chart 4

Regulatory Sodium Thresholds — US, UK/EU, and Sardine Brands Across Three Continents

Filipino, American, and Portuguese sardines plotted against the regulatory lines that decide what counts as “high in sodium” — and where each line is, or is not, enforced on retail shelves.

SODIUM PER SERVING (mg) FDA “LOW” “MODERATE” (no specific FDA label) warning required if “healthy” claim made above 480 mg FDA “HIGH” 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 140 mg 460 mg = 20% DV 480 mg 70 mg Wild Planet No Salt 🇺🇸 (per 85g serving) 220 mg Wild Planet EVOO 🇺🇸 (per 85g serving) 290 mg Portuguese sardines 🇵🇹 (EVOO, per ~125g serving) ~345 mg Fishwife “luxury” 🇺🇸 (preserved lemon, ~106g tin) ~390 mg Mega Sardines (standard) 🇵🇭 (tomato sauce, per 155g can) 427 mg Young’s Town 🇵🇭 (tomato sauce, per 155g can — De Jesus 2020) FDA “LOW SODIUM” — 21 CFR 101.61 FDA “HIGH” — 460 mg = 20% DV 480 mg disclosure trigger — 21 CFR 101.13 UK FSA “Traffic Light” (per 100g basis): ≤120 mg GREEN · 121–600 mg AMBER · >600 mg RED All Filipino brands above sit in UK AMBER on a per-100g basis; Mega chili and similar variants approach RED

Sources (all primary): US FDA, Daily Value on the Nutrition and Supplement Facts Labels (sodium DV = 2,300 mg/day; “20% DV or more is considered high”). 21 CFR 101.13 — disclosure statement required when nutrient content claims are made on foods exceeding 480 mg sodium per RACC or per labeled serving. 21 CFR 101.61 — “low sodium” claim defined as ≤140 mg per serving. UK Food Standards Agency, Front of Pack Multiple Traffic Light label guidance (per 100g basis: salt ≤0.3g/100g = green; 0.31–1.5g = amber; >1.5g = red — converted to sodium ×0.4). Product sodium values: Wild Planet (WildPlanetFoods.com); Fishwife (EWG Food Scores LabelINSIGHT capture, Jul 2024); Mega Sardines (Open Food Facts product 4806504710119); Young’s Town 427 mg per 155g can (De Jesus 2020 viral comparison study, sampled at SM supermarket Manila); Portuguese sardines in olive oil 290 mg per 125g serving (verified label data, portuguesesardine.us).

The reading: What three different regulatory regimes — the US FDA, the UK FSA, and the EU food-information framework — would force the seller to disclose to a Western consumer, the Philippine retail label is not yet required to disclose to a Filipino one. House Bill 6050, the Front-of-Package Warning Label Act, has been pending in the Philippine Congress and remains in committee as of April 2026.

I want to add one personal observation. In late 2024, I traveled to Portugal for what would turn out to be my last international chess tournament to date. Between rounds, I went out of my way to study the Portuguese sardine industry: I visited canneries, I read the labels, I ate the local conservas every day for almost two weeks. The Portuguese tradition is genuinely beautiful — the sardines are fished in season from the Atlantic, hand-cleaned, hand-packed in extra virgin olive oil, the can carries an artist’s illustration on the label, and the sodium figure on the back of that artist-illustrated can is roughly 290 mg per serving. The product costs roughly the same as a tin of Mega Sardines if you buy it in Lisbon.

The contradiction at the heart of The Charity Can is not that canned sardines are bad food. The contradiction is that the same product class can be sold one way in Porto, another way in Brooklyn, and a third way in Manila — and the third way is the one being sold to the population least equipped to push back on the marketing.

Section VIn America, the Same Can Is Sold Three Different Ways

The Mega Sardines logic does not stop at the Philippines. In the United States, the same product category is currently sold to American consumers through three parallel channels that mirror the Mega Sardines campaign in inverted form:

To biohacking American men, Joe Rogan endorses Wild Planet sardines to roughly 11 million listeners per episode as a longevity supplement — even after Rogan publicly admitted on a 2023 episode with Elon Musk that his sardine habit had given him bloodwork-detectable arsenic exposure. To affluent American women, the Brooklyn brand Fishwife sells the same canned fish at $9 to $14 per tin under the 2025 “Sardine Girl Summer” trend documented by Marie Claire and Hypebae. And to people living in food-insecure American households — 47.9 million people including 14.1 million children counted in USDA ERR-358 for 2024 — Feeding America’s network distributes the same shelf-stable canned protein, donated.

The food the food bank gives the hungry is the food the wealthy buy to feel sophisticated. The Mega Sardines superfood campaign is the same strategy operating in mirror form: in the United States, sold to the affluent with a fashion editorial; in the Philippines, sold to the poor with a US wellness certificate.

What unites both is that no executive in either country pays the cardiovascular cost of either purchase. That cost is borne by the consumer, not the seller, in every version of the story.

Section VIWhy I Defended This Food Without Knowing Why

One thing this essay has to say honestly. I am Filipino. My family eats canned sardines. My pantry — in Qatar, where my family lives now — has them in it. For most of my life, I would have been mildly defensive of the brand, and slightly more enthusiastic when I saw the “endorsed by USA” sticker.

The peer-reviewed neuroscience literature has begun to map why. Yang et al., publishing in Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience in 2022, used functional MRI to show that nostalgia activates four distinct neural systems simultaneously: autobiographical memory, self-reflection, emotion regulation, and reward processing. Reid et al., in Cognition and Emotion (2023), demonstrated that food is one of the most powerful nostalgia elicitors known to psychology — and that nostalgic foods are uniquely resistant to negative health information because warnings are processed as threats to identity rather than threats to health.

When an overseas Filipino eats Mega Sardines, the brain is not processing a meal. It is processing memory, identity, and reward at the same time. The Mega Sardines superfood badge, layered on top, converts that already-powerful neurological response into purchasing certainty. Naming this is not an attack on Filipino identity. It is an attack on the corporation that has decided to monetize Filipino identity at the expense of Filipino health.

· · ·

Section VII“Superfood” Fails Every Test a Borlaug Scholar Can Apply

Norman Borlaug believed that the moral obligation of any scholar working on hunger was to show their work — to make their reasoning, their evidence, and their citations visible to anyone who wanted to check them, and to refuse to let marketing language stand in for scientific evidence.

The Mega Sardines “superfood” claim fails every Borlaug test I can apply to it. It is unsupported by peer-reviewed nutritional science. It is associated with — though not proven causally to be falsified by — the 2024 BMJ umbrella review of 45 meta-analyses involving nearly ten million participants. And it is being sold, daily, into the bodies of the Filipino poor and the Filipino diaspora who deserve evidence-based food, not health-washed marketing dressed in galing-abroad clothing.

On March 19, 2026, the National Nutrition Council, UNICEF, and the World Health Organization formally urged Philippine Congress to pass the Healthy Food Environment Bill, citing UNICEF research showing that 99% of food advertisements children see online in the Philippines fail WHO standards. House Bill 6050, the Front-of-Package Warning Label Act, sits in committee. The campaign was warned about. It continued. It escalated. It continues.

The vulnerability of the Filipino poor and the diaspora’s strong attachment to home-country brands are real, and the marketing system around Mega Sardines is calibrated to both. That calibration is not accidental in any marketing operation of this scale, and the public-health concerns raised by UNICEF, WHO, and the National Nutrition Council are not weighed in the framing.

Section VIIIRead the Can. Name the Company.

The fix is not to ban canned sardines. It is to refuse to call them what they are not, and to name who profits when they are mislabeled.

A superfood is a marketing claim. Mega Sardines is a corporate product, not a national achievement. The corporation that markets it is not a champion of Filipino health — it is a corporation selling canned fish. The Medical Wellness Association of Texas is not a regulator — they are a private trade body. The Manila Times “Filipino Champions” feature uses the editorial framing of a national-pride profile to present what is, factually, a private-corporation marketing announcement.

The fish in the can is just food. Sometimes useful, sometimes risky, never magical.

No Filipino family eating sardines three times a day with rice should have to read a Texas-issued certificate to know whether what they are eating is actually feeding them, while the corporation that paid for that certificate gets profiled as a national champion in their morning newspaper.

That is the change I want to see in my lifetime, and that is the work — reading the can rather than the story written across it, and naming the company that wrote the story — that I will continue.

Calculate · Commit · Continue

Kerim Demirkol is a scholar-athlete, chess player, competitive swimmer, triathlete, Certified Fitness Trainer and Instructor, and aspiring medicine student. His work explores health, food systems, sport, chess, discipline, performance, and failure through the lens of competition, study, and personal growth. He writes about the systems that shape how people eat, train, think, compete, and live. Under his KimDem profile, he develops creative projects in music, sport, and memoir, including The Grandmaster I Never Became. More at kerimdemirkol.com.

Editor’s Note · Independence

This independent Field Note reflects the author’s analysis and does not represent an official position of the World Food Prize Foundation, the Wageningen Youth Institute, the Philippine Department of Health, the National Nutrition Council, UNICEF, WHO, or any named brand, retailer, or media outlet. The author has no commercial relationship with any company named here and has not received compensation, products, or sponsorship from any party in connection with this Field Note.

Brand benchmarks are drawn from publicly published manufacturer nutrition labels, Open Food Facts, the Environmental Working Group LabelINSIGHT database, and cited peer-reviewed and government sources only. Commercial market estimates are clearly labelled as estimates. Government statistics are cited as such. Peer-reviewed findings on ultra-processed dietary patterns are cited as background context, not as direct sardine-specific causation. The Medical Wellness Association is described as a private US wellness trade body, not as a regulator.

No claim of fraud, deception, illegal conduct, or wrongdoing is made or implied against any company or individual named in this Field Note. Educational use only. Not personal medical or nutrition advice.

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Sources & Further Reading
  1. Mauricio-Arriola, T. “Philippine Sardines Take the Lead as Global Superfood.” The Manila Times, Sunday Times Magazine — Filipino Champions, 25 January 2026.
  2. Manila Bulletin. “Mega Sardines Is Now a ‘Superfood.’” 30 June 2025.
  3. Lane, M. M., et al. “Ultra-processed Food Exposure and Adverse Health Outcomes: Umbrella Review of Epidemiological Meta-analyses.” BMJ, vol. 384, 2024, e077310. (n = 9,888,373)
  4. Hall, K. D., et al. “Ultra-Processed Diets Cause Excess Calorie Intake and Weight Gain.” Cell Metabolism, vol. 30, no. 1, 2019, pp. 67–77.
  5. Mendoza, K., et al. “Ultra-processed Foods and Cardiovascular Disease: Analysis of Three Large US Prospective Cohorts.” The Lancet Regional Health – Americas, 2024.
  6. Mente, A., et al. “Urinary Sodium Excretion, Blood Pressure, Cardiovascular Disease, and Mortality.” The Lancet, vol. 392, 2018, pp. 496–506.
  7. Souza, J. M. P., et al. “Eating More Sardines Instead of Fish Oil Supplementation: Beyond Omega-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids.” Frontiers in Nutrition, 2023.
  8. Monteiro, C. A., et al. “The UN Decade of Nutrition, the NOVA Food Classification and the Trouble with Ultra-processing.” Public Health Nutrition, vol. 21, 2018, pp. 5–17.
  9. Yang, Z., et al. “Patterns of Brain Activity Associated with Nostalgia.” Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, vol. 17, 2022, pp. 1131–1143.
  10. Reid, C. A., et al. “Food-evoked Nostalgia.” Cognition and Emotion, vol. 37, no. 1, 2023.
  11. David, E. J. R., and Okazaki, S. “Colonial Mentality: A Review and Recommendation for Filipino American Psychology.” Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology, vol. 12, 2006, pp. 1–16.
  12. DOST-FNRI. Halfway Point to 2030: Key Findings of the 2023 National Nutrition Survey. Manila, 5 June 2025.
  13. NNC, UNICEF, and WHO. NNC, UNICEF, WHO, Partners Urge Congress to Pass Healthy Food Environment Bill. World Obesity Day Philippine Forum, 19 March 2026.
  14. US FDA. Import Alert 16-13: Anchovies and Bagoong from the Philippines.
  15. US FDA. Import Alert 99-36: Low-Acid Canned Foods.
  16. US FDA. Daily Value on the Nutrition and Supplement Facts Labels. (Sodium DV = 2,300 mg/day.)
  17. US FDA. 21 CFR 101.13 — Nutrient content claims; disclosure statement.
  18. US FDA. 21 CFR 101.61 — “Low sodium” claim defined as ≤140 mg per RACC and per labeled serving.
  19. US FDA. Use of the “Healthy” Claim on Food Labeling. Updated rule, December 2024.
  20. UK Food Standards Agency. Nutrition labelling: Front of Pack Multiple Traffic Light scheme.
  21. De Jesus, D. Comparative Analysis of Canned Sardines Brands in the Philippines — viral Facebook study, March 2020. Reported by When in Manila, Coconuts Manila, and WeThePvblic, 30 March 2020.
  22. Pinhais & Cª Lda. NURI Sardines, Matosinhos, Portugal (artisanal canning since 1920).
  23. Open Food Facts. Mega Sardines in Tomato Sauce Chili Added 155g (product 4806504710126).
  24. Philippine FDA. Administrative Order No. 2014-0030: Revised Rules and Regulations Governing the Labeling of Prepackaged Food Products.
  25. USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service. Public Health Alert for Ineligible Meat and Poultry Products Illegally Imported from the Philippines. July 2024.
  26. USDA Economic Research Service. Household Food Security in the United States in 2024. Report ERR-358, 30 December 2025.
  27. Philippine Statistics Authority. Fisheries Situation Report, January–December 2023, 2024, and 2025. PSA OpenSTAT portal.
  28. Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR). Philippine Fisheries Profile 2024.
  29. Borlaug, N. E. Nobel Lecture: The Green Revolution, Peace, and Humanity. Oslo, 11 December 1970.

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