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โ€˜Extracting Value from the Right Amount of Fishโ€™: Saving Seafood Looks at Aquaculture Efficiency

June 6, 2018 โ€” WASHINGTON โ€” Through new techniques and technologies, farming fish is becoming increasingly efficient, leading aquaculture experts tell Saving Seafood in a new video.

โ€œWith a whole range of factors โ€“ improved nutritional knowledge, better management techniques of feeding on the farm, and all of that โ€“ [the fish inโ€“fish out] ratio has gone down,โ€ says Andrew Jackson, Chairman of IFFO RS.

โ€œFor every 0.7 kilos of fish in, you get a kilo of fish out,โ€ says Dan Lee, Standards Coordinator for the Global Aquaculture Allianceโ€™s Best Aquaculture Practices Program. โ€œSo thatโ€™s becoming very favorable towards aquaculture productivity.โ€

In the case of salmon farming, nutritionists are using alternative ingredients, including plant proteins like soy, and mixing canola and other vegetable oils in with pure fish oil. This has helped lowered the percentage of marine ingredients in fish feed to about 25 percent of farmed salmon diets, and projections are that this will drop below 10 percent by 2025.

โ€œTheyโ€™ve figured out that the key to being successful and profitable and sustainable is not necessarily to catch more fish, itโ€™s to extract as much value as possible out of the right amount of fish,โ€ says Tim Fitzgerald, Director of the Environmental Defense Fundโ€™s Impact Division.

These improvements have made farming fish one of the most sustainable forms of protein production, experts tell Saving Seafood.

โ€œWhen youโ€™re growing chickens or pigs or cattle, the transformation between the feed and the [farmed product] is much more inefficient than with fish,โ€ says Manuel Barange, Director of Fisheries and Aquaculture at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. โ€œSo if we have to feed any animal for us to eat, it makes sense to do that with fish. Itโ€™s more efficient.โ€

The video is the second in a series, Aquaculture Today, in which Saving Seafood interviews leading aquaculture experts on the latest advances in farmed fish, and its role in the world. Saving Seafood released a video yesterday on aquacultureโ€™s role in feeding the worldโ€™s growing population.

In addition to Mr. Jackson, Mr. Lee, Mr. Fitzgerald, and Mr. Barange, the video also features Julien Stevens, Researcher at Kampachi Farms, and Neil Auchterlonie, Technical Director at IFFO.

Interviews for Aquaculture Today were conducted by Saving Seafood at the 2017 SeaWeb Seafood Summit in Seattle, Washington.

 

Aquaculture Exchange: Andrew Jackson, IFFO

November 12, 2015 โ€” Despite great advances in aquafeed formulations aimed at lowering aquacultureโ€™s dependence on wild-capture fishery resources, there is little doubt that fishmeal and fish oil still play a crucial role in the global seafood supply. The highly nutritious marine ingredients are chief components in the production of the worldโ€™s animal protein supply โ€” some 20 percent of the global fishmeal supply goes to pig farmers, while high-quality fish oil remains in strong demand for direct human consumption as well.

The shape of the worldโ€™s reduction fisheries, therefore, has never been more important. Andrew Jackson, technical director at IFFO (The Marine Ingredients Organisation), recently spoke with the Advocate about the latest in reduction fisheries, the ever-increasing part that processing byproducts has to play and why fishmeal is so hard to replace, even for fish considered to be largely herbivorous.

Jackson announced earlier this year that he would step down from his post as technical director at the end of 2015, after nearly a decade of service. He will, however, take up the reins as chairman of the IFFO RS (Responsible Supply Certification Program) independent standards board. โ€œIt is my hope and intention to keep serving,โ€ he said of his upcoming two-year appointment.

WRIGHT: What is the difference between โ€œminingโ€ a resource like a forage or reduction fishery and โ€œcroppingโ€ it?

JACKSON: People often associate fishing with removing a resource as you would with mining. Like with coal, once itโ€™s taken out of the ground, thatโ€™s it, unless youโ€™ve got several million years to wait. Youโ€™re not going to get anything back; itโ€™s a one-use resource. You can look at fisheries as, weโ€™ve got this valuable thing, not in the ground but swimming around in the sea, and we can go out there, and we can take it out and we call sell it all and itโ€™s worth this much. You can look at it like that.

But how much better to crop it, as you would a sustainably managed forest. You take it out at a rate at which it can be replenished by nature. Thatโ€™s what the best management does. And that is when you become truly sustainable. In my book, sustainable means you can keep doing the same thing over and over again, year after year, and itโ€™s always there. Thatโ€™s what we should be looking to do, in any fishery, whether weโ€™re taking it out for direct or indirect human consumption.

Read the full story at The Advocate

IFFO Welcomes New Technical Director

October 22, 2015 โ€” The following was released by IFFO: 

IFFO, the trade association for the global marine ingredients industry, will see the retirement of Technical Director Dr. Andrew Jackson at the end of 2015 after ten years of great contributions to the organisation. IFFO will be joined in November by Dr. Neil Auchterlonie โ€“ taking over as Technical Director from 1st January 2016 after a two month handover period with Dr. Jackson.

Dr. Auchterlonie has B.Sc, M.Sc and PhD degrees in Marine Biology, Applied Fish Biology and Aquaculture, and has spent time working in technical and production positions in aquaculture companies and government department and research agencies. Neil has a strong track record in managing aquaculture and fisheries science programmes in both public and private sector, specialising in commissioning, managing and reporting on science that addresses policy questions for both government and industry.

Andrew Mallison, IFFO Director General, welcomed Dr. Auchterlonie, saying โ€œThe technical services provided by IFFO to members and the wider industry are a key part of the organisation. Neil was the unanimous choice of the selection panel for this critical role from a wide range of international candidates. Andrew Jackson has made a huge contribution to IFFO and I am delighted that Neil brings a set of new skills to further develop our services to members.โ€

Dr. Auchterlonie said โ€œI am delighted to be offered this opportunity to join the team at IFFO. I have been aware of the excellent work of both IFFO and Andrew Jackson over the years, and I am very humbled to be offered this chance to contribute to the organisationโ€™s work at a crucially important and exciting time for the marine ingredients industry and the aquaculture sector.โ€

 

 

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