The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Can offshore fish farming feed a hungry world?

-

PARIS: Harvesting fish and shellfish from offshore farms could help provide essential protein to a global population set to expand a third to 10 billion by mid-century, researcher­s said last Monday.

Suitable open-sea zones have the potential to yield 15 billion tonnes of fish every year, more than 100 times current worldwide seafood consumptio­n, they reported in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.

Coastal and inland aquacultur­e already accounts for more than half of the fish consumed around the world. Many regions, especially in Africa and Asia, depend on fish for protein.

But severe pollution, rising costs, and intense competitio­n for shoreline real estate mean that production in these areas cannot expand indefinite­ly.

Wild fishery catches, meanwhile, have mostly plateaued or are in decline.

That leaves the deep blue sea, or at least territoria­l waters up to 200 metres (650 feet) deep – the practical limit for anchoring commercial farms.

“Oceans represent an immense opportunit­y for food production, yet the open ocean environmen­t is largely untapped as a farming resource,” the authors noted.

To assess that potential, a team of researcher­s led by Rebecca Gentry, a professor at the University of California Santa Barbara, undertook a series of calculatio­ns.

First they divvied up the ocean into a grid, excluding areas that were too deep or already given over to oil extraction, marine parks or shipping lanes, for example.

Some 11.4 million square kilometres (4.4 million square miles) of ocean could be developed for fish, and 1.5 million square kilometres for bivalves, such as mussels, the study found. Then – to calculate the biomass that might be harvested – the team matched 120 fish species and 60 bivalves to cells in the grid, depending on the temperatur­e of the water and other factors such as oxygen density. Currently, just over 40 species make up 90 per cent of global seafood production. Only four per cent of the total consists of finfish, such as salmon, barramundi, groupers and bass.

All the wild fish harvested world-wide could be obtained from an area the size of Lake Michigan, or Belgium and the Netherland­s combined, the study showed.

“Nearly every coastal country has high marine aquacultur­e potential and could meet its own domestic seafood demand... typically using only minute fraction of its ocean territory,” the authors said.

Many of the countries with the highest potential – Indonesia, India and Kenya among them– are also predicted to experience sharp increases in population, they noted. — AFP

 ??  ?? A worker feeds adult trout and salmon inside an open-sea fish farming cage, belonging to the company Russian Aquacultur­e, at the coastline of the Ura Bay, in the north-western Murmansk region, Russia on Aug 2. — Reuters photo
A worker feeds adult trout and salmon inside an open-sea fish farming cage, belonging to the company Russian Aquacultur­e, at the coastline of the Ura Bay, in the north-western Murmansk region, Russia on Aug 2. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia