Posts Tagged ‘seafood’


Farmed Fish Direct to Restaurants

February 16th, 2009 by Hayley

US company, Bell Aquaculture, is set to supply perch filets to three Delaware County restaurants with the ultimate goal of selling 8.5 million pounds of fish per year by 2015. everystockphoto-2182170-l

Bell Aquaculture  supplied yellow perch filets to the chef of the Purdue University Agricultural Alumni Fish Fry, as a trial run for the plan to distribute perch to restaurants.

Their plan is to supply fish directly to restaurants, skipping the traditional supply chain.

Having identified the potential market at 38 million pounds with the current market now less than two million pounds, there is forth sight for substantial growth.

Bell Aquaculture hopes to be producing more than 30,000 pounds of perch filets each month by August.

Currently, 20 employees are handling the production, with a predicted increase to 120 employees.

With the possibility of providing yellow perch filets to hundreds or thousands of restaurants in the United States, there might be a potential for a market worldwide.

If restaurants are expressing interest greater than Bell Aquaculture can single handily produce, could this altering of the supply chain (reducing prices as low as possible and  guaranteeing a fresh product) provoke market growth and provide a key solution towards reducing the global fish production gap?

 


Large-scale fish farming in the Gulf of Mexico

February 3rd, 2009 by Hayley

In the Gulf of Mexico, there has been much interest in innovation towards transforming unused offshore oil and natural gas platforms into fish farms. Some oil companies have experimented with platforms to anchor underwater pens.

This week a crucial step in this process has developed.  Authorities have approved the ardently debated proposal to allow large-scale fish farming in the Gulf of Mexico, creating the first federal regulations for a fledgling industry.

Opponents have cited concerns about damage to the Gulf’s environment, as well the effect on traditional fishing communities that have relied on catching and selling wild fish.

But supporters say the industrial-scale pens and cages could provide a new source of seafood, 80 percent of which now comes from imports.

Commercial seafood company owner John D. Ericsson favours the plan. He said the United States has fallen behind countries like Greece, Norway and Chile, where offshore farming has taken off.

Ericsson said his company, Florida-based BioMarine Technologies Inc., is looking at growing fish in cages that could contain up to 60,000 cobia, also known as king fish, and amberjack. He said it would take about $10 million to set up an offshore fish farm.

Despite approval Wednesday from the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council, a 17-member regional advisory body that sets fishing regulations in the Gulf, the fish-farming plan still faces a series of administrative hurdles, and needs approval from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Officials who developed the plan say it will be at least a year before anyone could apply for an open-ocean aquaculture permit, even with the necessary approval.

More than 100 environmental and fishing industry groups have signed on against the fish-farming plan, and many say they are hopeful the new Obama administration will quash the measure or send it back to the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council for revisions.

One of the main complaints has been that offshore aquaculture regulations should be developed by Congress on a national scale, rather than by a regional body such as the Gulf council.

The Gulf council’s plan calls for 10-year permits to set up offshore fish farms.

Officials set a total cap on farmed fish production at 64 million pounds, and they expect about five to 20 such operations to emerge within the next 10 years.

Drafters say they have addressed a number of ecological concerns in the plan: It requires an up-front environmental analysis from anyone applying for a permit, mandates the hiring of an aquatic animal health inspector, and lays out numerous record-keeping requirements regarding escaped or diseased fish.


Promotion

October 31st, 2008 by Andrew

For any one interested in what is happening in the seafood market there is some interesting information on Seafood Experience Australia website www.seafoodpromotion.com.au . This organisation is finally gaining some traction after a long and arduous gestation, with rapidly increasing membership and a proactive approach to seafood market development. A credit to Ron Edwards and the others who percevered(Ron being one of a number of our ex pollies quietly doing good work in the industry). They apeear to be using open innovation techniques in promotion by teaming up with FRDC, the Sydney Fish Markets and Seafood Services Australia and others. The link into the “Australian Seafood Consumer Education Initiative’ gives an insight into how the seafood industry can tap into government programs centered around national health issues. Another interesting site is that of a US seafood trader www.legalseafoods.com which explains a successful strategy used in that market to ligt consumption. This will become all the more important as aquaculture production picks up and if national obesity, diabetes, hearth desease and ADHD rates continue to climb. Watch out China and India as levels of affluence rise and diets change.