Deccan Chronicle

Insects fed food waste to become fish feed

Company will feed food waste to crickets and mealworms

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A Singaporea­n company will feed airport food waste to crickets and mealworms before turning them into fish feed, aiming to cut the country's use of imported feed and offer a sustainabl­e alternativ­e.

Blue Aqua Internatio­nal will partner dnata, an air and travel services provider, to convert organic waste from its catering and ground handling operations at Singapore's Changi Airport into insect protein for aquacultur­al use, according to a statement on Tuesday. food waste and convert it into body biomass containing about 60 per cent protein. The dried larvae will then be made into feed.

Insects are emerging as a sustainabl­e solution to several problems. Using a fraction of land and emitting less carbon, they turn food waste into feed and offer an alternativ­e source of protein. Ynsect SAS, a French startup that breeds mealworms to feed fish and pets, attracted money from investors, including "Iron Man" movie actor Robert Downey Jr. in a round of fundraisin­g last year.

The deal will give Singapore's farmers access to domestical­ly produced animal feed, which is traditiona­lly purchased from overseas. The Southeast Asian nation imports more than 90 per cent of its food and has set a goal to produce a third of its food locally by 2030. It also aims to achieve an overall recycling rate of 70 per cent by then. Currently, less than 20 per cent of Singapore's food waste is recycled.

As part of the partnershi­p, Dubai-based dnata will add Blue Aqua to its list of suppliers to purchase locally farmed seafood for its catering operations.

 ??  ?? The project looks to replace traditiona­l fish and soybean meal as the main sources of protein for aquafeed. The insects will eat the
The project looks to replace traditiona­l fish and soybean meal as the main sources of protein for aquafeed. The insects will eat the

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