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MAINE: Waldoboro eel farm wants to raise at least 2 million eels a year for American tables

August 5, 2021 โ€” Ground has been broken on Maineโ€™s first land-based eel aquaculture operation in Waldoboro.

Sara Rademaker, founder and president of American Unagi, said when itโ€™s complete, the 27,000-square-foot facility will be able to grow and process at least 2 million eels and perhaps take back a tiny portion of an industry thatโ€™s been dominated by Asian markets.

โ€œRight now, we have this really valuable glass eel fishery. The entirety of that fishery is being exported mostly to China, theyโ€™re grown on farms there, and then weโ€™re importing them back into the US,โ€ Rademaker said.

Read the full story at the Bangor Daily News

Slimy, smuggled, and worth more than gold: Can one Maine entrepreneur break into the crime-ridden global market for eel?

March 12, 2021 โ€” Itโ€™s hard for aquaculturist Sara Rademaker to pin down the precise moment she fell in love with eels.

It may have been when a fisherman first gifted her a handful of squirming baby eelsโ€”also called glass eels or elversโ€”or the hours she spent with them, raising them to adulthood in a giant tank in her basement. Or it might have been when she killed them, cooked them in a borrowed smoker, and took a bite.

โ€œWhen I had that eel, I was like, โ€˜I have to grow this fish,โ€™โ€ Rademaker said. โ€œPeople get obsessed with eels. They like to work with them, and then it just, like, engulfs them.โ€

Six years after that first bite, Rademaker stared down into a tank in her eel businessโ€™ headquarters in rural Maine, watching sinuous, footlong eels weave figure-eights under the surface. The eelsโ€™ slim bodies tumbled together in a blur of green backs and stormcloud-gray bellies. When they were netted as glass eels in 2018โ€”legally, she stressesโ€”they were worth more than gold, at about $2,400 per pound.

Read the full story at The Counter

Grant to Thomaston startup may help keep Maine elvers home

American Unagi wins a $10,000 grant from Gorham Savings.

August 2, 2017 โ€” American Unagi, the Thomaston-based company that aims to grow Maine glass eels to market size and sell them domestically, received a $10,000 grant from Gorham Savings Bank this week as part of the bankโ€™s Emerging Idea Award.

American Unagi was born out of Sara Rademakerโ€™s desire to offer an alternative for this globe-trotting local resource. Glass eels, or elvers as they are better known, are caught in Maine waters and flown to Asia where they are sold to fish farms, grown out to adult length and then, quite often, processed for sushi that returns to the United States via shipping containers.

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

MAINE: Eel farmer wants to keep Maineโ€™s wriggly gold close to home

December 1, 2016 โ€” SOUTH PORTLAND, Maine โ€” Sara Rademaker wants to give the East Coastโ€™s most valuable eels a much shorter commute from river to sushi roll.

Baby eels, also called elvers, are at the center of a lucrative business in Maine, which is home to the only large-scale fishing operation for them in the country. Fishermen sold them for more than $2,000 per pound last year, and they typically are sent as seed stock to Asian aquaculture companies so they can be raised to maturity and processed into sushi and other food products.

But Rademaker, a Maine aquaculture farmer, is looking to change all that and keep more of the stateโ€™s valuable baby eels closer to home. Sheโ€™s operating a small eel farming operation in South Bristol, Maine, that raises the elvers so they can be sold live and fully grown to local restaurants.

Rademaker launched American Unagi in 2014 and sold her first eels to Maine sushi restaurants this summer. She is hoping to scale up production in the coming years.

โ€œThe local food movement is shifting toward seafood,โ€ she said. โ€œHaving products that are produced local, that have traceability, that can show they are sustainable is going to be important.โ€

Eel aquaculture in America is underdeveloped, as most of the business takes place in Asia and Europe. Rademaker buys her elvers locally from purchasers who acquire them from Maine fishermen, and she is raising her eels at the University of Maineโ€™s Darling Marine Center. She said she expects to sell more than 2,000 pounds of the eels within two years.

Maine is one of only two states with an elver fishery; South Carolinaโ€™s fishery is much smaller.

Rademaker has set an ambitious goal. Americaโ€™s entire wild-caught eel fishery, which is mostly centered around Maryland, only yields between 800,000 and a million pounds of eels per year. Wild-caught older eels, which make up most of the fishery, are worth much less than the baby eels Maine fishermen take from rivers and streams.

Read the full story from the Associated Press at the Herald & Review

Sara Rademaker is letting little eels get big in Maine

May 31, 2016 โ€” SOUTH BRISTOL, Maine โ€” โ€œThey are like little torpedoes,โ€ Sara Rademaker says, looking down at a tank full of year-old eels in a feeding frenzy.

Her tone is fond, almost as if the eels wiggling in and out of a submerged laundry basket were a basket of lively kittens, but this is all business. Rademaker is doing what no one has tried to do in Maine before โ€“ grow out elvers to eels for the commercial food market.

Rademaker is a young woman, but has 12 years of farming and aquaculture experience. A graduate of Auburn University in Alabama, sheโ€™s worked with subsistence farmers in Uganda as part of a U.S. AID project and farmed tilapia in Ghana. Sheโ€™s taught middle school students how to farm tilapia and lettuces.

Three years ago she began studying European and Asian systems for growing elvers into eels in contained areas, asking herself the question, why not here in Maine, the biggest source of American baby glass eels in the country?

Although sheโ€™s just starting her third year developing her eel aquaculture system, sheโ€™s gearing up to bring her first eels to market this summer, with plans to tap into the local sushi market to begin with.

โ€œSheโ€™s already so far ahead of anyone else in the state,โ€ says Dana Morse, a UMaine Cooperative Extension associate professor and researcher based at the Darling Marine Center. โ€œItโ€™s impressive.โ€

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

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