Business Standard

The $300 mn plan to farm salmon in mid-ocean

- ADAM POPESCU 31 July

Three miles off Norway’ s rugged coast ,1.5 million salmon swim in a 220- foot-high, football-field-long mass of floating mesh-wire frames and nets. This is Ocean Farm 1, the world’ s first deep-sea aquacultur­e project, designed by leading salmon farmer Sal Mar AS A.

The company paid China Shipbuildi­ng Industry Corp. $300 million upfront for six facilities that offer more space than convention­al shoreline farms (large nets in sheltered waters) while diffusing fish waste, allowing them to be packed in tighter.

How It Works

Oxygen sensors and high-definition cameras monitor the salmon for, among other things, growth and signs of illness. Midway through Ocean Farm?1’s yearlong trial run, SalMar says it’s seen strong growth and low mortality rates. Sixteen movable, submerged valves disperse food at set times and allow fish to live at depths of up to 180?feet, rather than clustering them near the surface, as in other farms.

Next Steps

SalMar plans to harvest the farm’s first generation of salmon in the second half of the year and says that if the developmen­t phase is successful, it’ll be possible to establish fish farming anywhere in the open sea. The company says OF1 can withstand devastatin­g waves, on the order of 50?feet.

One drawback: Packing so many fish so closely together heightens the risk of widespread disease if even a few get sick. It also forces the salmon to stay in much deeper water with less oxygen than they’re used to, which limits their growth, according to Tim Dempster, a marine ecologist and professor of bioscience­s at the University of Melbourne.

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